Mohammed and Islam 9781463220365

Ignaz Goldziher was a pre-eminent scholar of Islam during the late 19th and early 20th centuries. This book encapsulates

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 9781463220365

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M o h a m m e d and Islam

Exploring the House of Islam: Perceptions of Islam in the Period of Western Ascendancy 1800-1945 2 Series Editors Mark Beaumont Douglas Pratt David Thomas

This is a series of re-publications of writings by Europeans, Americans and other non-Muslims on Islam from the nineteenth and twentieth centuries up to the end of the Second World War. This period of Western political, economic, cultural and religious impact on the Islamic world is shown through the eyes of mainly European and American Scholars, Travellers, Missionaries and others who perceived Muslim culture in a variety of ways. The series is devoted to three kinds of perception: of Islamic History and Institutions; of Islamic Religion and Culture; and of Islam in comparison with Christianity. Making these works available again will enable renewed understanding of the attitudes and actions of non-Muslims in their engagement with Islam.

Mohammed and Islam

By

Ignaz Goldziher Translated by

Introduction to the 1917 edition by

Kate Seelye

Morris Jastrow

Introduction to the 2009 edition by

Douglas Pratt

-âk

1

gorgias press 2009

Gorgias Press LLC, 180 Centennial Ave., Piscataway, NJ, 08854, USA www.gorgiaspress.com Copyright © 2009 by Gorgias Press LLC Originally published in 1917 All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, scanning or otherwise without the prior written permission of Gorgias Press LLC. 2009 • ^

1 ISBN 978-1-60724-410-3 Reprinted from the original edition published in New Haven (1917).

L i b r a r y of Congress Data

Cataloging-in-Publication

Goldziher, Ignac, 1850-1921. [Vorlesungen liber den Islam. English] Mohammed and Islam / by Ignaz Goldziher ; translated by Kate Seelye ; introduction to the 1917 edition by Morris Jastrow ; introduction to the 2009 edition by Douglas Pratt. p. cm. --

(Exploring the house of Islam:

perceptions of Islam in the period of Western ascendancy 1800-1945 ; 2) Includes bibliographical 1.

Islam. 2.

references.

Islam--Doctrines.

I. Seelye,

Kate Chambers, b. 1889. II. Jastrow, Morris, 1861-1921. III. Pratt, Douglas. IV. Title. BP161.G6 2009 297--dc22 2009042082 Printed in the United States of America

TABLE OF CONTENTS

Table of Contents

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Series Foreword Exploring the House of Islam: Perceptions of Islam in the Period of Western Ascendancy 1800—1945 vii 1. Perceptions of Islamic History and Institutions viii 2. Perceptions of Islamic Religion and Culture xi 3. Perceptions of Islam in Comparison with Christianity xv 4. The Scope of the Series, Exploring the House of Islam: Perceptions of Islam in the Period of Western Ascendancy 1800-1945 xx References xxii Ignaz Goldziher, Mohammed and Islam

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SERIES FOREWORD EXPLORING THE HOUSE OF ISLAM: PERCEPTIONS OF ISLAM IN THE PERIOD OF WESTERN ASCENDANCY 1 8 0 0 - 1 9 4 5

Contemporary debate about the way non-Muslims in the colonial era wrote about Islam has been centred on the accusation that Europeans and others were often more engaged in constructing a picture suited to their own imaginations than passing on to their Western readers a portrait of Islamic realities. Edward Said, one of the strongest proponents of this view, argues that 'the language of Orientalism.. .ascribes reality and reference to objects of its own making... "Arabs" are presented in the imagery of static, almost ideal types, and neither as creatures with a potential in the process of being realized nor as history being made' (Said: 1985, 321). Ziauddin Sardar, while criticising Said's secularism as failing to represent Islam adequately, agrees with his thesis concerning Western writing about Islam and claims that many in the West are still perpetuating the same old ideas today. 'Unless the limitations of representation masquerading as reality are perceived and understood, a plural future founded on mutual respect and enhanced mutual understanding is impossible. We will continue to live out the consequences of conflict, mistrust, denigration, and marginalisation that are the all too real legacy of Orientalism' (Sardar: 1999, 118). To what extent such criticisms can be weighed depends on familiarity with the writing of those from outside the House of Islam who ventured to depict those who lived in the house. This series of re-publications of non-Muslim writings about Islam aims to provide resources for contemporary readers to investigate the attitudes and actions of mainly American and European scholars, travvii

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ellers, and missionaries in their engagement with Muslims during the period of Western ascendency, 1800-1945. The series is grouped around three forms of perception of Islam: of Islamic History and Institutions; of Islamic Religion and Culture; and of Islam in comparison with Christianity. 1. PERCEPTIONS OF ISLAMIC HISTORY AND INSTITUTIONS

The beginning of the Nineteenth century saw the arrival of Napoleon in Egypt and new development of French interest in Islam typified by the work of Silvestre de Sacy at the licole de luingues Orientales Vivantes, established in 1795 in the wake of the revolution. He was the father of many European scholars of Islam, particularly emphasising an objective, scientific study of texts. His promotion of solid research was reflected in the founding of several scholarly societies; The Paris Asiatic Society in 1821, the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland in 1823, the American Oriental Society in 1842, and the German Oriental Society in 1847. His Chrestomathie arabe in three volumes was published in 1826 and contained extracts from a wide range of Arabic writing in prose and poetry, destined to become a staple source for Europeans seeking an entry into the unknown world of Islamic thought. However, this attempt to investigate Muslims by means of a very long history of literature in Arabic was made more complex by the onset of colonial control of Muslim peoples in the second half of the nineteenth century. Although the Dutch and British East Indies Companies had interacted with Muslims in their respective areas of trade before the nineteenth century, French annexation of Algeria in 1848 and British and French dual control of Egypt in 1879 brought more Europeans into direct contact with Muslims, not just as travellers, traders, and missionaries, but as rulers. The upshot of this exercise of power was likely to result in the objectification of those being governed as "inferior" in order to control rather than to appreciate. The complaint of Said and Sardar, rooted in this reality, is echoed by Máxime Rodinson, 'All this, inevitably, could only encourage a natural European self-centredness, which had always existed, but which now took on a very markedly contemptuous tinge' (Rodinson: 1979, 9-62, 51). Nevertheless, interest in Islam as a subject of intellectual pursuit developed considerably in the second half of the nineteenth century. Several new posts for the study of Islam were created in

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European universities and editions and translations of Muslim writings were published. One example of this academic development is William Muir who became an administrator at the University of Edinburgh after being a civil servant in British India. Muir produced a four volume The Ufe of Mahomet in 1861, transmitting for English readers traditions concerning the Prophet from Muslim sources. His German contemporary, Gustav Weil, published his five volume Geschichte der Chalifen in 1862, which similarly interpreted Muslim accounts of the early centuries of Islamic rule for European readers. On the basis of such editing and translating arose a variety of interpretations of Islamic history in the subsequent generation. Foremost among these interpreters was Ignaz Goldziher, a Hungarian Jew, whose erudition in Judaism and Islam was remarkable. Beginning with studies in his own religion, he gradually displayed such a mastery of Muslim traditions, jurisprudence, theology, mysticism, and philosophy, in publications from 1872 to 1919, that Goldziher has been credited with establishing 'Islamology as a historical science' (Waardenburg: 1963, 244). Much of this academic study of Islam was based on manuscripts lodged in European museums such as The British Museum in London or in University libraries such as Leiden in the Netherlands. Thus the history of Islam was told in a dialectical conversation between Muslim writers, mainly from the classical period of the ninth to twelfth centuries, and the elite group of European specialists who could engage with them. Waardenburg has shown how five different Western scholars from the late nineteenth through to the early twentieth century crafted their distinctive portraits of Islam on different presuppositions. Goldziher saw the development of Islamic orthodoxy from the spiritual seeds sown in the earliest sources (Waardenburg, 244). Dutch scholar, Snouck Hurgronje, whose writing on Islam ranged from 1882 to 1928, emphasised the system of organising society set up by Muhammad and expanded in a variety of settings on the history of Islam (ibid, 248—9). C. H. Becker's writing, from 1899 to 1932 in Germany, painted a very different picture in his belief that Islam was a product, not so much of the original sources in Arabia, but rather of the cultures into which it expanded. The context created the history (ibid, 252). D. B. MacDonald, writing in the USA between 1895 and 1936, understood the diversity of Islam to have a central core of authentic religious experience, the soul encountering God (ibid, 256). Frenchman

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Louis Massignon published from 1909 to 1959 significant studies of Islamic mysticism, which he regarded as the centre of Muslim life (ibid, 263-4). Such considerable divergence of views might support Said's opinion that so called 'scholarly objectivity' was actually a mask for the exercise of control over Muslims. In his own review of these five orientalists Said sweeps aside all but Massignon as 'hostile' to Islam (Said, 209). He notes how even the latter willingly accepted the call from colonial administrators to offer advice in managing their Muslim charges (ibid, 210). He concludes that collusion in colonial rule had become the norm for European scholars of Islam in the early decades of the twentieth century. Waardenburg accepts the heart of this critique. He recognises that the scholars of Islam who supported colonial administration shared a common assumption that Europeans knew best what their Muslim subjects should believe and practise in terms of Islam. 'Consequently, not only the colonial administration but also the scholars connected with it mostly had a negative view of any Muslim movement that opposed the Western mother country, and indeed all forms of Islam that implied a threat to the colonial power's rule' (Waardenburg: 2002, 103). He concedes that 'disinterested' study of Islam was 'extremely difficult' in the period before independence from European domination after World War Two (ibid, 105). It seems clear then that since Western scholars in the universities were concentrating on the study of ancient Muslim texts it was likely that interest in current Islamic life would be relegated to illustrating the contents of the established tradition. So when actual Muslim life seemed to diverge from what was prescribed in the texts it was necessary to call it popular, folk or animistic Islam and to decry the fact that real, authentic or pure Islam was not being followed as it should by many who claimed to be Muslims. The overall importance of the academic research into Islamic texts especially from the ninth to twelfth centuries lay in making non-Muslims aware of the rich heritage of the formative period of Islamic history that established norms for proper Muslim belief and conduct, and that passed on the intellectual inheritance of Greek civilisation to an intellectually impoverished medieval Europe. Thus while Islam sometimes was attractive to nineteenth century European intellectuals such as Thomas Carlyle, in his On Heroes, Hero-Worship, and the Heroic in History of 1841, for the sheer mono-

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theism of the message of Muhammad, the main reaction to the discovery of the vast literary output being surveyed by the academics was gratitude for the assimilation and development of Aristotle, Galen, and Euclid by leading Muslims in the 'classical' period of Middle Eastern Islam, and the subsequent passage of such Greek thought to Europe through Muslims in Spain. Attitudes of the educated public who paid attention to the actual content of the scholarly outpouring were rather more critical, continuing the longstanding antipathy of Europeans to the anti-Christian character of Islam which had in the past represented a political threat to them. The fact that the Ottoman Empire was the 'sick man of Europe' enabled intellectuals in Europe to treat Islam with condescension, and to suppress to some extent the old fears of invasion that arose from the strength of Islam in the past. If there were limits to the value of relating Islamic history and describing long-standing Muslim institutions, then the observations of travellers and missionaries restored some balance to the perceptions of Islam as it was actually lived out, since, unlike many of the university academics, they spent time living among Muslims, observing and analysing them. In addition, by the end of the nineteenth century the academic discipline of Anthropology was becoming established, with the result that serious investigation of Muslim societies began in earnest, providing scholarly respectability to writing about Muslim religion and culture as contemporary phenomena. The re-publication of writing about the religion and culture of Muslims is the rationale of the second section of the series. 2. PERCEPTIONS OF ISLAMIC RELIGION AND CULTURE French interest in Egypt grew out of Napoleon's initiative to establish French dominance there. This led to French managers who could relate to Egyptian cultural concerns, illustrated in a multivolume Description de l'Egypte produced between 1809 and 1828. Travel writing by François-René Chateaubriand, Itinéraire de Paris à Jérusalem, et de Jérusalem à Paris, 1810—11, and Alphonse de Lamartine, Voyage en Orient, 1835, though focused on the Holy Land, gave readers a glimpse of Muslims in the Middle East. British visitors to Egypt included Edward Lane who, unlike the French travellers, stayed long enough to offer much more than a glance at Muslim life. His detailed observations in An Account of the Manners and Customs of the Modern Egyptians, 1836, were backed by fluency in Arabic

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demonstrated in his Arabic-English lexicon. He also published The Englishwoman in Egypt: Letters from Cairo written during a residence there in 1842, which included descriptions of Egyptian female life by his sister Sophia Lane who learned enough Arabic to spend time visiting local women in their homes. Publication of such observations of Muslim culture led to further interest in exploration of little known Muslim societies. Special attention to Arabia, the origin of the Islamic faith, was given by the English translator of the Arabian Nights, Richard Burton, whose Personal Narrative of a Pilgrimage to Al-Madinah and Mecca, published in 1893, included a minutely observed account of the Muslim TLajj, achieved as a result of passing himself as a Muslim doctor from India in 1855—6. Another Englishman, Charles Doughty, spent two years among the Bedouin in Arabia in the 1870's practising Western medicine. His description of several different tribes as well as townspeople of the Hejaz was published in two volumes in 1888 as Travels in Arabia Deserta. Fluent like Burton in Arabic, Doughty was able to relate the attitudes of those who gave him hospitality in their tents and houses. Unlike Burton, he challenged their religious and cultural assumptions. While attempting to make a living dispensing medicine he encountered Bedouins who held out their hands to have them read by him. 'They esteem the great skill in medicine to bind and cast out the jan. They could hardly tell what to think when, despising their resentment, I openly derided the imposture of the exorcists; I must well nigh seem to them to cast a stone at their religion' (Doughty: 1921, vol 1, 548). Doughty was more typical of European travellers than Burton. Not content to describe and analyse, he ventured to denigrate by generalising from particular experiences. For instance, he noticed that children were never checked for lying although he heard it said that lying was shameful. 'Nature we see to be herself most full of all guile, and this lying mouth is indulged by the Arabian religion' (ibid, volt, 241). By the end of the nineteenth century the sciences of anthropology and sociology had become established in European universities and the documenting of how ethnic groups lived gathered pace as a proper academic pursuit. For example, The Journal of the Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland was founded in 1871 to provide a showcase for field work among the world's peoples. There was now a new opportunity for social scientific investi-

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gation of contemporary Muslim societies to supplement the knowledge of texts from Islamic history. The criticism that 'disinterested' study of Muslim peoples was next to impossible since European ethnologists held that Muslims were inferior to them in social development has to be balanced by the care with which data were gathered and interpreted by leading field workers. While some of these worked for colonial governments such as Hurgronje in the Dutch East Indies, others were independent, such as the Finnish Edward Westermarck, whose studies of Moroccan Muslims were outstanding in thoroughness and impartiality. Westermarck visited Morocco on a travelling scholarship from the University of Helsinfors in 1898 and returned another twenty times up to 1926 when he published his two volume 'Ritual and Belief in Morocco, having spent seven years in total visiting all the regions of the nation. The fruit of a career of listening to Moroccans speak about their beliefs and practices is unfolded in an analysis of baraka, 'a mysterious wonder-working force which is looked upon as a blessing from God' (Westermarck: 1926, vol 1, 35); ofjinn, 'a special race of spiritual beings that were created before man' (ibid, 262); of martin, 'a person who has an evil eye' (ibid, 414); of categorical and conditional curses; of dreams; and of rites connected with the Muslim calendar, childbirth, and death. He had already elaborated on marriage rites in his 1914, Marriage Ceremonies in Morocco. An instance of his reliance on evidence-based conclusions comes at the end of his exposition of beliefs and practices concerning the dead. The belief widespread among sub-Saharan African peoples that dead relatives can have a malevolent impact on the living was not evident in Morocco. 'The people are in close and permanent contact with their dead saints, who are looked upon as friendly beings by whose assistance misfortune may be averted or positive benefits secured. On the other hand, the souls of the ordinary dead rarely exercise any influence at all upon the fate of the living, either for good or for evil' (Westermarck: 1926, vol 2, 552). The fact that the Muslim world stretched from Morocco to the Philippines meant that local versions of Islam were being described in quite diverse settings during the first half of the twentieth century. The more social scientists spent time engaging with specific Muslim peoples the more complex the house of Islam seemed to be, with a much larger number of rooms occupied by different sorts of Muslims than the historical texts might have im-

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plied. S h f i Muslims in Iran shared core beliefs and practices with SunnI Muslims elsewhere but significant divergences of belief and practice were observed by Bess Donaldson in Mashhad in the province of Khorasan in her 1938 depiction of the religious life of the average person, The Wild Rue: A. Study of Muhammadan Magic and Folklore in Iran. Much of her information came from women, and her chapter topics are similar to Westermarck's. In her treatment of beliefs concerning the evil eye, Donaldson reported an incantation used to avert the danger of the evil eye. Incense made of wild rue, myrtle, and frankincense was burned at sunset and the following incantation repeated; 'Wild rue, who planted it? Muhammad. Who gathered it? ALI. Who burned it? Fatima. For whom? For Hasan and Husain'. She commented that the names of the 'Five' combined 'their power with that of the incense', and that Iranian women called the incantation 'atil wa batil'offensive and defensive' (Donaldson: 1938, 20-1). S h f i devotion to the family of "Ali coloured the whole of life for the people of Mashhad such that spiritual power was believed to emanate from these five to overcome everyday problems. Mashhad was the site of the martyrdom of "Ali Rida, the eighth Imam, and his tomb had been a very popular destination for Twelver Shfi's. Donaldson reported that around a hundred thousand made the pilgrimage each year, many to make a vow by tying a piece of cloth to the railings of the tomb or to collect water poured over the lock of the gates to the tomb to take home for the healing of the sick (ibid, 66—8). Academic social scientists strove for as much objectivity as possible, and their ability to refrain from value judgments based on 'enlightened' Western attitudes marked them out from those who wanted to see change in the societies they were observing. Christian missionaries tended to be in the latter group. Even the more dispassionate among them were living among Muslims so that they could pass on the benefits of Christian civilisation. An example of more thoughtful descriptive writing from the missionary community comes from the husband and wife team, V. R. and L. Bevan Jones, who taught at the Henry Martyn School of Islamic Studies in Aligarh, India. Their Woman in Islam, 1941, was designed as an introduction to Muslim women for female missionaries in India. Their treatment of the seclusion of women was presented in a dialectical style to show the kinds of change that were taking place for a few. The ninety five percent of Muslim women who were pardan-

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ishin could be seen by no man with whom they could be married and when outside the home wore the burqa. 'That simple statement may seem at first empty of content, but consider how the rule operates. Here is a university student, newly married, who insists that he is going to take his bride for a drive. What a thrill! But as the elder women dress the girl for the occasion they murmur disapproval of these new ways. The bridegroom goes eagerly to take his bride out and finds in the carriage the girl's mother, three little girls, and a small brother—all crowded in, with the windows closed and curtained. And yet even that was a step forward' (Bevan Jones: 1941, 49). The impact of non-Muslim beliefs on Indian Muslims is described in relation to fear of the spirits of the dead, particularly the ghosts of the sweeper caste who were 'believed to be notoriously malignant' (ibid, 339). These Churels could possess Muslim women when they were ceremonially unclean, particularly 'those who have failed to win their husband's love or are themselves of bad character' (ibid). The Bevan Jones' approach to detailing the everyday lives of Indian Muslim women combined study of the Qur'an, the Sunna, and subsequent interpretations of the roles of women in the various Indian Muslim communities in a careful way. However, their presence in India represented the missionary force that had been engaged in persuading Muslims to change in the direction of Christian faith. The republication of writing by missionaries is the aim of the third section of the series. 3 . PERCEPTIONS OF ISLAM IN COMPARISON WITH CHRISTIANITY

At the beginning of the nineteenth century Muslims in India were already known to Europeans through Catholic mission and the administration of the British East India Company. Henry Martyn worked for the latter as a chaplain but also set up schools for Muslims in which portions of the Bible were studied. Martyn completed the translation of the New Testament in Urdu in 1810, and his Persian version was published after his early death in 1812. Education for Muslims was the role of various mission agencies in the period of formal British rule. Within this approach were ideas concerning the relative truth of Islam and Christianity and the enlightenment thought to follow from an embracing of Christian values. Martyn found that Muslims were more than willing to debate with him about the rationality of the oneness of God over against the Trin-

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ity, and future mission to Muslims in India became marked by such polemical encounter (Vander Werff: 1977, 30—36). The best known example of debate was Karl Pfander, a German member of the Basel Mission who published The balance of Truth in Urdu in 1843 after having produced an Armenian version in 1831 and a Persian one in 1835. As a result of engagement with Muslims in India, he rewrote the work in the late 1840's using Muslim writing on Muhammad and the early history of Islam provided by Muir and Weil as well as the Hadith collection of Majlisi published in Teheran in 1831 (Powell: 1993,147-8). This knowledge of Muslim tradition enabled Pfander to compare Jesus and Muhammad from the perspective of Islamic sources. Rather than denigrate the latter in the style of his European predecessors, Pfander quoted sayings of Muhammad concerning the sinlessness of Jesus and contrasted these with his own admission of sin, and concluded, 'If Muhammad himself claimed to have needed forgiveness and yet taught that Jesus was without fault then the Christian case is made by the Prophet of Islam' (see Beaumont: 2005,118). The tradition of answering Muslim questions about the validity of Christian beliefs continued through the remainder of the nineteeth century. Englishman William St Clair Tisdall of the Church Missionary Society represented the best of this approach as publisher of literature in Persian from the Henry Martyn Press at Julfa in Isfahan. His Sources of Islam, 1901, in Persian and his additions to Pfander's The Balance of Truth, 1910, in English, used European scholarship to argue that the Qur'an was influenced by previous religious traditions, not least Jewish and Christian, thus conveying to a Muslim audience the virtually unanimous convictions of non-Muslim students of Islam. His A Manual of the Teading Muhammadan Objections to Christianity, 1904, written to assist missionaries in answering Muslim questions about Christianity, advised care with the use of the Bible since it was widely regarded as corrupt by Muslims. It would be wiser to refer to the way the Qur'an actually refers to the Christian scriptures, 'to show that the arguments which Muslims now bring against the Bible are confuted in large measure by the statements of the book which they themselves believe to be God's best and final revelation to man.. .in quoting it we acknowledge merely that it has been handed down from Muhammad, and that he claimed for it the lofty position which Muslims accord to it' (Tisdall: 1904, 4). It is clear from this advice

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that Tisdall believed it was imperative not to show disrespect to the Prophet himself, and this is emphasised in the way a missionary should answer the question, What do you think of Muhammad? 'In this manual I have on certain occasions pointed out certain facts with reference to Muhammad, e.g. that he is not in the Qur'an regarded as sinless. This has been done for the information of the Christian student, and is necessary in a book of this description. But it is very delicate ground indeed on which to tread in speaking with a Muslim' (ibid, 16). This sensitivity to the feelings of Muslims 'was a marked improvement over many earlier apologetic approaches' (Vander Werff, 277). Another attitude to Christian mission to Muslims can be seen in the French Cardinal Charles Lavigerie whose appointment as Bishop of Algiers in 1867 led, the following year, to his founding of the Society of Missionaries to Africa, popularly known as 'The White Fathers', because they adopted white versions of local inner and outer robes, gandora and burnous. Lavigerie shared the sentiments of many French Catholics that the establishment of French rule in Algeria in 1830 might result in a return to the Christian way of life not seen properly since the time of Augustine in the fifth century. 'In his providence, God now allows France the opportunity to make of Algeria the cradle of a great and Christian nation. . .He is calling upon us to use these gifts which he has given us to shed around us the light of that true civilisation which has its source in the Gospel' (Lavigerie, 'First Pastoral Letter', 1867, in Kittler: 1957, 41—2). Lavigerie's intentions for the new missionary order were that they should work on a fourfold plan of education, charity, example, and prayer. Schools and hospitals would be the means to achieve the plan. He established a female version of the order that became known as 'The White Sisters', and by 1871 there were eight young men and six young women from French backgrounds actively learning Arabic, and about Islam and Algerian culture. The life of compassion was the hallmark of this approach to Muslims, and this was necessitated by the reality that Algeria was governed by the French political principle of the separation of church and state. There was no room for the kind of debating with Muslims that was tolerated by British governors in India. Colonial administration took different forms with respect to the promotion of Christianity.

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The Middle East contained Christian communities that stretched back in time before the arrival of Islam and this reality affected European and American Christian engagement with Muslims in the region. There were three approaches to relations with these churches according to William Shedd in lectures given at Princeton Theological Seminary in 1902—3. Shedd, an American Presbyterian missionary in Persia, had an intimate knowledge of Christian sources in Syriac as well as Muslim history in Arabic, and related the history of relations between Muslims and Christians in the first five lectures. In his sixth and final lecture he discussed the attitudes of Christians from outside the region. The Catholic Church and the Russian Orthodox Church had attempted to absorb Middle Eastern churches into their own communions. The Anglicans had accepted the Assyrian Christian Church of the Nestorians as autonomous, yet sympathised with the Russian Orthodox in believing that there should be a return to the true orthodox community. Other Protestants worked for a reformation within the ancient churches but found that individuals preferred to be identified with the style of Christianity lived out by the missionaries, and so independent Protestant churches emerged from the traditional Christian communities. Shedd reluctantly accepted the necessity of the latter. 'I do not believe that such separation should be sought, but experience shows that it is inevitable.. .the policy of the Protestant missionaries in permitting separation from the ancient churches is justified by the fact of history that Christianity as expressed and limited by the forms of belief and organization of the oriental churches has failed to conquer Islam and that a reformation consequently is imperative in order to do so' (Shedd: 1904, 217-8). This confidence in the ability of Christian mission to attract significant numbers of Muslims was shared particularly by Americans who perhaps had more of a pioneering spirit than many Europeans. Outstanding among them was Samuel Zwemer who determined to tackle the most difficult challenge of all in the Muslim world, the Arabian Peninsula, while training for the ministry of the Reformed Church in America in 1888. Bahrain and Kuwait had no indigenous church so the Reformed mission had no competition in its outreach to Muslims. Medical work and personal evangelism based on literature were the means of interacting with the local population. Zwemer produced much of the literature in Ara-

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bic and had a reputation for talking to all kinds of Muslims. 'Taking the name Dhaif Allah (guest of God), he was at times labelled Dhaif Iblis (guest of the devil) but years later local citizens called him, Fatih al-Bahrain, (the pioneer of progress in the Islands)' (Vander Werff, 175). Among his voluminous writing for fellow Christians is his constant advocacy of making Christ known to Muslims who have the barest knowledge of him. In The Moslem Christ of 1912 he provides extensive analysis of the way the Qur'an, the Hadith, the Qur'an commentators, and the traditional stories of the prophets portray Jesus. In a subsequent chapter entitled 'Jesus Christ Supplanted by Mohammed' he points out that 'for all practical purposes Mohammed himself is the Moslem Christ' (Zwemer: 1912, 157). Having observed Muslim devotion for the Prophet and consulted popular literature from the bazaar, he expounded the widespread beliefs he encountered for a Western audience reared on classical versions of Islam. 'In spite of statements in the Koran to the contrary, most Moslems believe that he will be the only intercessor on the day of judgment. The books of devotion used everywhere are proof of this statement.. .Mohammed holds the keys of heaven and hell: no Moslem, however good his life, can be saved except through Mohammed. Islam denies the need of Christ as Mediator, only to substitute Mohammed as a mediator, without an incarnation, without an atonement and without demand for a change of character' (ibid, 160—1). So what was the Christian missionary to do? In his final chapter, 'How to preach Christ to Moslems who know Jesus', Zwemer suggests that Muslims be encouraged to read the gospels for themselves so that they can appreciate why Christians want to bear witness to him. There is no value in offending Muslims over their estimation of Muhammad, but since 'they glorify their prophet, why should we not glorify ours?' (ibid, 184). The fact that relatively few Muslims in the Middle East publicly identified as Christians caused even the most enthusiastic missionary to ponder why this was so. As colonial rule by European nations was being rejected within majority Muslim communities particularly after the First World War, Missionaries had to reevaluate their work. Wilson Cash, missionary in Egypt and then General Secretary of the Church Missionary Society, reflected on the relationship between Christians and Muslims in his Christendom and Islam, of 1937. After a historical survey he approached 'the

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Christian Answer to the Moslem Quest' in his final chapter. H e advised that 'Christians can only make their contribution and preach their message in a spirit of humility.. .They cannot go as members of a superior race, but as brothers in a common humanity. They must live their faith before they can teach it.. .Ultimately men will see that the ideal held up to them is not Mohammed at all, but Christ, and in the Eternal Christ they will find again the source of life and power' (Cash: 1937, 173—4). Humble service rather than reliance on colonial prestige was now the right approach. With the coming of independence of Muslims from foreign rule after World War Two, the opportunities for Christian missionaries would become fewer in Muslim populations, and the Christian mission enterprise would come under increasing pressure. The rise of renewed and vigorous forms of Islam would mean that Muslims would become ready to see the whole enterprise of European and American impact on the House of Islam as a plot to undermine the foundations of the House, led by Christian missionaries whose task was to soften up the ground for their political masters. Republication of writing by Christian missionaries should enable readers to determine to what extent this criticism is true. 4. T H E SCOPE OF THE SERIES, EXPLORING THE HOUSE OF ISLAM: PERCEPTIONS OF ISLAM IN THE PERIOD OF WESTERN ASCENDANCY 1800-1945 The aim of the series is to re-publish significant books from the period by non-Muslims about Islam. Books written by Muslim authors are not part of the series since the views of non-Muslims are the central concern. While books that are selected for republication refer to Muslim oral and written sources, these are passed through a non-Muslim filter, and it is this process of interpretation that is the main focus of the series. The series includes a wide variety of interpretations of Islam so that no particular school of thought is privileged. This inclusive approach explains the division of the series into three sections that allow for books by scholars of Islamic texts and anthropologists of Muslim societies to be read alongside observations of travellers and reports of missionaries. Within these three sections is a sufficient range of voices, the dismissive, the critical, the sympathetic, and the admiring, which provide evidence for twenty-first century readers of approaches to

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Muslims by outsiders in the modern colonial era. If these voices can be heard afresh in all their various tones then they should enable a fully rounded assessment to be made of attitudes to Islam in this period. The critique of Said and Sardar that western writing about Islam has been irrevocably tainted by a false imagination can then be evaluated through contact with original sources. The resulting conclusion may be that, though never free from presuppositions about Islam, European and American writers about Muslims were not uniformly prejudiced but at times reported quite objectively about their explorations of the House of Islam. The first six volumes to be published include two from each of the three sections. Ignaz Goldziher's Mohammed and Islam [1917] and John Subhan's Sufism, Its Saints and Shrines [1938] provide views of various aspects of Islamic history and institutions; Alexander Kinglake's Eothen [1844] and Amy and Samuel Zwemer's Moslem Women [1926] portray Islamic religion and culture in divergent ways; and W. R. W. Stephens' Christianity and Islam [1877] and W. H. T. Gairdner's The "Rebuke of Islam [1920] show how Christian writing about Islam in comparison with Christianity varied within the period. Each volume contains a general introduction to the series along with a particular introduction to the book which places the work in its context for the twenty-first century reader. The series aims to include re-publications of around one hundred volumes. Projected books to be included are, in Section One, 'Perceptions of Islamic History and Institutions', Muir's The Efe of Mahomet [1878], Grimme's Mohammed [1892-5], and MacDonald's The Development of Muslim Theology, Jurisprudence and Constitutional Theory [1903]. Section Two, 'Perceptions of Islamic Religion and Culture', will include Lane's An Account of the Manners and Customs of the Modern Egyptians [1836], Doughty's Travels in Arabia Deserta [1888], and Bell's The Desert and the Sown [1907]. Section Three, 'Perceptions of Islam in Comparison with Christianity', will have Wherry's Islam and Christianity in India and the Far East [1907], Jessup's F i f t y Three Years in Syria [1910], and Zwemer's The Muslim Christ [1912],

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REFERENCES

Beaumont, I. M. Christo log)/ in Dialogue with Muslims, (Carlisle: Paternoster, 2005) Bevan Jones, V. R. & L. Woman in Islam, (Lucknow: The Lucknow Publishing House, 1941) Cash, W. W. Christendom and Islam, (London: SCM Press, 1937) Donaldson, B. A. The Wild Rue: A Study of Muhammadan Magic and Tolklore in Iran, (London: Luzac, 1938) Doughty, C. M. Travels in Arabia Deserta, new edition, (London: Jonathan Cape, 1921) Kittler, G. D. The White Fathers, (London: W. H. Allen, 1957) Powell, A. A. Muslims and Missionaries in PreMutinj India, (Richmond: Curzon Press, 1993) Rodinson, M. "The Western Image and Western Studies of Islam" in The Legacy of Islam, (eds) J. Schacht and C. E. Bosworth, (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1979) Said, E. Orientalism, (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1985) Sardar, Z. Orientalism, (Buckingham: Open University Press, 1999) Shedd, W. A. Islam and the Oriental Churches: Their Historical Relations, (Philadelphia: Presbyterian Board of Publication, 1904) Tisdall, W. S. A Manual of the Leading Muhammadan Objections to Christianity, (London: SPCK, 1904) Vander Werff, L. L. Christian Mission to Muslims: The Record, (South Pasadena: William Carey Library, 1977) Waardenburg, J. D. J. L'Islam dans le Miroir de L'Occident, (Paris & the Hague: Mouton & Co, 1963) Waardenburg, J. D . J . Islam. Historical, Social, and Political Perspectives, (Berlin & New York: De Gruyter, 2002) Westermarck, E. Ràtual and Belief in Morocco, (London: Macmillan, 1926) Zwemer, S. M. The Moslem Christ, (Edinburgh & London: Oliphant, Anderson & Ferrier, 1912)

Series Section I: Perceptions of Islamic History and Institutions

IGNAZ GOLDZIHER, MOHAMMED AND ISLAM Ignaz Goldziher stands out as a pre-eminent scholar of Arabic and Islam of his day, spanning the latter decades of the 19th century and the opening of the 20 th . Indeed, his own prodigious work arose out of 19th century developments in the academic study of Islam, as the 1917 introduction outlines. The value of Goldziher's work is that it encapsulates in a detailed summary form the culmination of his own life spent in the study of Islam, and it provides something of an historical commentary on the development of the Western academic study per se of Islam. Intended initially as a series of six lectures to be delivered in America, personal circumstances intervened and, instead, the original work was revised and refined, then its German text was translated into English to become a classic of its day; a classic that, in our day, is well worth re-visiting. Accordingly, it is now provided for a new readership. Details of Goldziher's own life and career are outlined in the initial Introduction by Morris Jastrow. Suffice to say such details highlight Goldziher's significance as a relative pioneer in respect to western scholars engaging with Arabic language on the one hand, and Muslim scholarship at depth on the other. This pattern has been repeated subsequently by other scholarly luminaries such as Kenneth Cragg, and many more besides. But Goldziher was also a scholar of his times, as the language of the original reflects: nowadays the term 'Mohammedan' and 'Mohammedanism' are eschewed as quaintly dated if not falsely misleading. That Muhammad was and is revered by Muslims does not make him the focus of faith, or the proper name of that faith, in the way that 'Christ' functions for Christians and so is embedded in the name of that xxiii

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religion. Today we can say that the scholarly world of the West has come a long way with respect to both its understanding of and speaking about Islam as compared to the days of Goldziher. Nevertheless, what Goldziher provides is both an insight into the historical period he occupied in respect to the study of Islam, and a reference point for that study, which remains of supreme relevance even today. For Goldziher's aim remains topical and relevant: to articulate, in some detail yet nevertheless in a singlevolume summary form, the genesis and development of the religious, legal, and philosophical system that we know as Islam. What is it, and how did it come about? Historical dimensions of conflict, dissent, and realpolitik all contributed to the emergence and contours of the nascent faith and its community of believers. The need of practical guidance for concrete everyday situations prompted the early turn to prophetic example as the necessary complement to Quranic utterance. Goldziher's work unpacks the development of Hadith literature and its importance to Islamic scholarship, together with the way the early Muslim community was formed as it developed its distinctive patterns of being and doing. In the second and third chapters Goldziher reviews the development of understanding Islam with respect to law (Shari'd) and theological belief, or dogma (kalam), around which the history of Islam has turned ever since. For it is these two regions of the phenomenon of Islam that yield the core of Muslim identity: believing submission to the Will of God. Being Muslim means doing God's Will; mental assent and lived action are intimately intertwined. But being Muslim is not merely a matter of following rules; the life of piety, of religious experience, also finds a place as Goldziher details in the fourth chapter. And if many in the modern world still labour under the false supposition that Islam is a monolithic religion, or that Muslims are effectively clones of Muhammad, Goldziher's investigations into the great sectarian diversity and the profound Sunni — Shi'a divide within the Muslim world should act as a sufficient source of disabuse. Islam is highly variegated. The ideal of unity finding expression as a single community of faith—the Ummah—is no nearer realisation than the parallel Christian ideal of One Church to which all who follow that faith might co-inhere. As Goldziher himself avers, the historical life of Islam "finds its full expression in the very diversities which it itself has produced" (p. 2).

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Goldziher's observation that Islam "furnishes the strongest example of Schleiermacher's theory that religion arises from a feeling of dependence" (Ibid) both exemplifies the euro-centricity of his scholarly context—which could see him labelled within the discredited Orientalist camp—but also exemplifies a perfectly valid comparative dimension of the phenomenology of religion upon which he draws. But, again, we today must read him as a scholar of his times—and recognise the yet timeless quality of much of his discourse and observations on Islam. F. D. E. Schleiermacher was a German scholar of religion who, though working primarily within a Christian orbit, sought to comprehend the deep dynamics of religion. His theory was no mere psychological reduction; rather he sought to describe something of the essential ontological relationship that holds between human being and divine reality. The creaturely sense of dependence upon the 'Transcendent Other'— howsoever conceived—became the leitmotif for proposing the intrinsic reality of religion and inherent validity of theistic belief. Religion is about relationship—to and with that whence life arises, and to and with all else that constitutes life, but especially fellow human beings. And the heart of that relationship is an inchoate feeling, and a varyingly ritualised expression, of existential dependence upon the very source of life. The creature gives due recognition to the Creator; the human being is a child of God—or, in Islamic terms, abd' ullah\ the servant of God (Allah). Religions play this out in their patterns of worship, devotion, and other liturgical expressions. In respect to this theoretical perspective Goldziher located Islam as genuinely religion; comparative discussion does not demean, rather its intention is to illuminate. Although the influences of other cultures, philosophies, religions, and so on—especially Greek, Roman, Syrian, Persian, and even Indian—can be identified in respect to the development of Islamic cultural and religious life, and Goldziher can assert that Muhammad did not of himself proclaim anything totally new in terms of religious ideas, nevertheless the unique role played by Muhammad in giving voice to a universal religious truth within his own temporal and cultural context and then, from there, out into the wider world, bears unmistakable hallmarks of originality and gift. It is the historian's task to acknowledge then understand the implications of this. If at the inception of his prophetic career Muhammad could be said to have manifested the mien of a cultural

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and religious reformer for the Arab peoples, the passage of time, and the success of his endeavours—at least relatively so—meant that, upon his death, he could be said to have been the divinely appointed founder of a new faith that, at its theological heart, is the pure expression of theistic faith as such. So the reforming dimension is extended: theistic belief as such and its sequelae in lived practice are re-visited and re-formed. Hence Islam regards the voluntary newcomer not as a convert but as a 'revert': someone who has heard the call or invitation (da'wah) and returned to the fold. But, as noted above, the focus of faith is not Muhammad—he is but the conduit for the divine message, received as the Qur'an. Muslim faith begins with the Qur'an and adds to that other guidance and directive (tradition, or Sunnah) as given by the last Prophet. So, as the normative Muslim faith evolves, orthodoxy is expressed in the slogan 'All a Muslim needs is the Qur'an and the Sunnah'. Goldziher's work tracks through this development. One of the particular strengths of Goldziher's book is that his investigation of historical development probes into underlying religious motivations and allied theological concepts and issues. Here we are presented with the fruit of a thorough and encompassing scholarship where critical and informed commentary flavours what might otherwise be an interesting but ultimately shallow narrative of events. To understand Islam demands understanding Islamic theology and allied religious sensibilities. Muhammad's undergirding concern was that God be known for who God really is and that God's ways and Will be followed, for it is only in such knowledge and responsive submission that the human being can be truly heror himself. Thus, for example, it is in that context that, as Goldziher shows, much of the militancy that marks the emergence, and so subsequent history, of Islam can be understood. To be sure, the scholarly references that Goldziher draws upon are dated and some perspectives could even be said to be out-dated. Nevertheless they comprise something of the history, if not bedrock, of the modern Western scholarly engagement with Islam and to that extent a work such as this is of great historic

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value. But more than that, to the extent the treatment of the development of Islam portrayed by Goldziher is recognizably apposite if not also accurate, there is much here that can also inform our understanding of contemporary Islam, for its roots lie in all that Goldziher covers. Douglas Pratt, University of Waikato, New Zealand & Monash University, Australia.

C O N T E N T S PAGE INTRODUCTION

CHAPTER

I II III IV

CHAPTER

V

CHAPTER

VI

CHAPTER CHAPTER CHAPTER

INDEX

vii

Mohammed and Islam The Development of Law Dogmatic Development Asceticism and Sufiism Mohammedan Sects Later Development

1

37 84 148 214 295 345

INTRODUCTION Through the publication during the past fifty years of a large number of Arabic sources for the study of Mohammedanism, before that accessible only in the manuscript collections of European libraries, our knowledge of the origin and course of Islam, and more particularly of the development of Islamic theology in the various countries to which the religion spread, has been greatly extended. Hand in hand with the publication of important Arabic texts has gone the critical study of the material in the form of monographs, and of papers in the transactions and journals of learned societies. Naturally, European scholars—in Germany and Austria, in England and France, Holland and Italy—have been the chief workers in this field, though during the last decades some valuable contributions have been made by American scholars. The strong impetus to Arabic studies, the result of which is seen in the considerable body of scholars now devoting themselves to the subject, may be traced back to the distinguished French Orientalist, Silvestre de Sacy (1758-1838) and to his pupil Heinrich Leberecht Fleischer (1801-1888), for many years Professor of Oriental Languages at the University of Leipzig, and who had the distinction of training a large proportion of the Arabic scholars of the following generation. Other notable Arabists of the middle of the nineteenth century were Gustav "Wilhelm Freytag of the University of Bonn (1788-1861) also a pupil of de Sacy, Ferdinand Wuestenfeld (1808-1899), particularly active in the publication of Arabic texts, Heinrich Ewald (1803-1875) of the University of Gottingen, and Reinhart Dozy of the University of Leyden (1820-1883), while coming closer to our own days we have the late Professor M. J . de Goeje

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(1836-1909), Dozy's successor; Ignazio Guidi of Rome (1844), Julius Wellhausen of Güttingen (1844- ), and Theodor Noeldeke of Strassburg, the latter perhaps the greatest Semitist of any age and who is still active at eighty. Among the pupils of Professor Fleischer, during whose lifetime Leipzig was the center of Arabic studies, were such eminent scholars as the late David Heinrich Müller of the University of Vienna (1846-1913), the late Albert Socin (1844-1899) who became Fleischer's successor, the late Hartwig Derenbourg (1844-1908) who filled the chair of Silvestre de Sacy in the Ecole des Langues Orientales Vivantes, Paris, and Ignaz Goldziher of the University of Budapest, whose prodigious learning led Professor Noeldeke to proclaim him recently as " without a rival in the domain of Mohammedan theology and philosophy." English readers will, therefore, be particularly grateful to Mrs. Seelye for having made accessible to them a volume in which Professor Goldziher sums up in popular form the results of his life-long researches in the field in which he is an acknowledged master. The six chapters of the present work were originally prepared for delivery in this country under the auspices of the American Committee for Lectures on the History of Religion in 1908, but owing to illness, from which he has happily recovered, Professor Goldziher was unable, after he had prepared the lectures, to undertake the trip across the ocean. The present translation into English is authorized by the distinguished author, who has in the course of a revision of his work made some additions in order to bring it down to date. It was my good fortune to have had Mrs. Seelye as a pupil in Arabic for a time, and to suggest to her the preparation of this translation, at the same time undertaking, as my share, to go over her version and to compare it sentence for sentence with the original so as to make certain by our united efforts of having reproduced Professor Goldzi-

INTRODUCTION.

IX

her's exposition accurately and, as I hope, in a readable form. The task was not an easy one, as in general translations from German into English require particular care and skill; and these difficulties are increased when it comes to translating a work such as that of Professor Groldziher, containing a great many technical terms and involving the exposition of a subject exceedingly intricate at times. Before proceeding to outline the main features of Professor Goldziher's important volume, which will no doubt take rank as an authoritative presentation of the theme, it may not be out of place to give a brief sketch of the author's career. Born in Hungary in 1850, he carried on his university studies at Budapest, Berlin, Leyden and more particularly at Leipzig. After obtaining his degree of Doctor of Philosophy, he travelled for a year in the Orient and was one of the first Europeans to continue his Arabic studies at Al-Azhar, the famous University of Cairo. Through this opportunity he not only became conversant with modern Arabic in addition to his knowledge of the classical speech, but came into close contact with native theologians which strengthened his interest in those phases of Mohammedanism to which he has devoted the greater part of his career. On his return to his own country he became connected with the University of Budapest, where he has occupied for many years the chair of Oriental Languages. His productivity has been as extensive as it has been valuable. Apart from an earlier work on ' ' Mythology among the Hebrews," of which an English translation was issued in 1877, he established his reputation as one of the leading Arabic scholars of his time by a volume on the Zahirite sect, published in 1884, and in which he betrayed that wide range of learning combined with rare acumen, which have made his researches so invaluable to all students

X

MOHAMMED AND ISLAM.

of Islam. Two volumes of "Mohammedan Studies" (1889-1890), followed by two further volumes of studies on Arabic Philology (1896-1899), deal with many important problems and embody results of investigations that, apart from their intrinsic value, opened up new avenues of research for others. Professor Goldziher has been an active contributor to the leading Oriental journals of Europe and has received the recognition of honorary membership in the learned academies of England, France, Germany, Denmark, Holland, Austria-Hungary, Sweden, the United States, and even of India and Egypt, while Cambridge and Aberdeen Universities have conferred honorary degrees upon him. The present volume reveals all those special qualities distinguishing Professor Goldziher's work, a thorough grasp of the niceties of Mohammedan theology, acquired as a result of the profound and long-continued study of the huge Arabic literature on the subject, critical insight and striking originality in the combination of innumerable details to present a vivid picture. The general aim of the work may be set down as an endeavor to set forth in detail the factors involved in the development of the rather simple and relatively few ideas launched by Mohammed, into an elaborate and complicated system of theology, at once legal and speculative and at the same time practical. The part played in this development through the military conquests of the followers of Mohammed during the first two or three generations after his death is shown by Professor Goldziher in the manner in which regulations for government and for religious practices are evolved, theoretically on the basis of the utterances in the Koran, but practically in response to the necessity of maintaining a strong hold on the followers of Islam, more particularly in the conquered lands outside of Arabia. A conflict ensued between the worldly minded elements concerned with

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problems of taxation and strengthening governmental control, and the pious adherents whose absorption in the tenets and ideals of Mohammed's teachings was as complete as it was sincere. Professor Goldziher shows how this conflict led to the rise of innumerable '' traditions'' regarding Mohammed's sayings and doings, as the pattern to hold good for all times, and although these "traditions," growing into an extensive " H a d i t h " (that is, "tradition") literature, have turned out on a critical examination to be for the larger part entirely spurious, they have a value as showing the increasing emphasis laid on the Prophet's personality as the ultimate authority. It is to Professor Goldziher's researches that we owe largely the present view taken of the " H a d i t h " literature by Arabic scholars, and the place to be assigned to it in the development of both Mohammedan law and dogma. In this volume the learned author sums up his studies within this field, and adds much to reinforce his former conclusions of the manner in which this curious system of carrying back to a fictitious source the religious practices, political methods and theological doctrines arose with the growth of the little religious community, founded by Mohammed, into a world religion in close affiliation with widely extended political ambitions. Mohammedan law and Mohammedan dogmatism became the pivot around which the entire history of Islam has revolved down to our own days. The two chapters, in which this legal and dogmatic development of the religion are set forth, will give the reader entirely new points of view regarding the history of Islam, and prepare him for the exposition that follows of ascetic and mystic movements within Mohammedanism and which still hold a strong sway in Mohammedan lands. In the fifth chapter Professor Goldziher touches upon the most intricate of all problems connected with Mohammedanism, the formation of the numerous sects in Islam.

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The difficult theme is set forth in a remarkably illuminating manner. The author picks out the salient features of the two chief divisions of Mohammedanism—Sunna (or Orthodoxy) and Shi'ism—and then sets forth in logical sequence the almost endless ramifications of Sunnite and Shi'ite doctrines. F o r all who would seek to penetrate to the core of the great religion which still sways the lives of a very large proportion of mankind, some two hundred millions, Professor Goldziher's volume will be an indispensable guide. As a companion volume to it, in English, it may be proper to refer here to the lectures on Mohammedanism, delivered in this country, under the auspices of the American Committee for Lectures on the History of Religion, by Professor C. Snouck Hurgronje 1 before various universities and now published in book form. Always excepting Noeldeke, who forms a class by himself, Professors Goldziher and Snouck Hurgronje are the two leading Arabic scholars of the age, recognized as such the world over, and English readers are indeed fortuhate to have at their disposal two works of such commanding interest and authoritative status that complement one another. It is to be hoped that the appearance of these two contributions to our knowledge of one of the great religions of the world will stimulate interest in the subject, and be of service also in promoting Arabic studies in our American universities. MOBRIS JASTEOW,

JB.

University of Pennsylvania, J a n u a r y , 1917.

1

Mohammedanism by C. Snouck H u r g r o n j e (New York, P u t n a m ' s , 1916).

MOHAMMED AND ISLAM

CHAPTER I. MOHAMMED AND ISLAM.

I. The question, what from a psychological point of view is the origin of religion, has been variously answered by investigators of the subject who treat religion as an independent science. Prof. C. P. Tiele in his Gifford Lectures at Edinburgh has collected a number of these answers and submitted them to a critical examination.1 He recognizes the consciousness of causality which he regards inherent in man, the feeling of dependence, the perception of the eternal, and the renunciation of the world as the ruling emotions from which have sprung the seeds of psychic religion. To me this phenomenon in the life of man seems to be of far too complicated a nature to justify its working evidence from a single motive. Nowhere do we find religion as an abstraction, disassociated from definite historical conditions. It lives in deeper and higher forms, in positive manifestations, which have been differentiated through social conditions. Any one of these, together with other stimuli of religious instincts, may take a leading place without, however, entirely excluding other auxiliary factors. In the very first steps of its development, its character is ruled by a predominating motive, which maintains its leadership throughout the further development of the whole historical life of the religion. This holds good also for religious forms, whose rise is the product of individual inspiration. In the case of the particular religion, with the historical aspects of which we are to deal in these lectures, the name which its founder gave it at the very beginning, and which it has now borne for fourteen centuries reveals its prevailing features and characteristics.

2

MOHAMMED AND ISLAM.

Islam means submission—the submission of the faithful to Allah. This term, which characterizes better than any other the essence of the relation in which Mohammed places the believers to the object of their worship, epitomizes the feeling of dependence on an unlimited Power to whom man must give himself up, willingly or unwillingly. This is the predominating principle inherent in all expressions of this religion, in its ideas and its forms, in its morals and its worship, which determine, as its decisive mark, the characteristic instruction which man is to gain by it. Islam in fact, furnishes the strongest example of Schleiermacher's theory that religion arises from a feeling of dependence. II. The task before us in these lectures does not demand that we should point out the peculiarities of this system of religion, but rather that we present the factors which have cooperated in its historical development. Islam, as it appears in its final shaping, is the result of various influences by means of which it has developed into an ethical view of life, into a legal and dogmatic system attaining a definite orthodox form. We have to deal also with the factors which have directed the stream of Islam into various channels. For Islam is no homogeneous church, its historical life finds its full expression in the very diversities which it has itself produced. The forces which determine the historical life of an institution are twofold. First, the inner impulses springing from the very being of the institution and acting as impelling forces to further its growth. Second, those intellectual influences which come from without, which enrich the range of ideas, and make them more fruitful in bringing about its historical development. Although in Islam the practical proof of the impulses of the first kind are not lacking, nevertheless it is mostly the assimilation of foreign influences which mark the most important moments of its history. Its dogmatic development

MOHAMMED AND ISLAM.

3

betrays Hellenistic thought, its legal f o r m shows the unmistakable influence of Roman Law, its civic organization, as it is unfolded in the ' Abbaside caliphate, shows the moulding of Persian civic ideas, while its mysticism illustrates the appropriation of Neoplatonic and Indian ways of thought. But in each one of these fields Islam proves its capability to assimilate and work over foreign elements, so that its foreign character is evident only through the sharp analysis of critical investigation. This receptive character stamps Islam f r o m its very birth. I t s founder, Mohammed, proclaims no new ideas. He brought no new contribution to the thoughts concerning the relation of man to the supernatural and infinite. This fact, however, does not in the least lessen the relative worth of his religious conception. When the historian of morals wishes to decide on the effect of an historical event, the question of its originality is not uppermost in his consideration. I n an historical estimate of the ethical system of Mohammed the question is not whether the content of his proclamation was original in every way, the absolute pioneer conception of his soul. The proclamation of the Arabian Prophet is an eclectic 1 composition of religious views to which he was aroused through his contact with Jewish, Christian and other 2 elements, by which he himself was strongly moved and which he regarded as suitable f o r the awakening of an earnest religious disposition among his people. His ordinances, although taken f r o m foreign sources, he recognized as necessary for the moulding of life in accordance with the divine will. His inmost soul was so aroused that those influences which had thus awakened him, became inspirations, that were confirmed by outward impressions and by divine revelations, of which he sincerely felt himself to be the instrument. I t lies outside our task to follow the pathological moments which aroused and strengthened in him the

4

MOHAMMED AND ISLAM.

consciousness of revelation. We recall Harnack's significant words concerning "Maladies which attack great men only, who in t u r n create out of this malady a new life, an energy hitherto unsuspected surmounting all barriers, and the zeal of prophets and apostles.' ' 3 Before us stands the prodigious historical effect of the call to Islam, more particularly the effect on the immediate circle, to whom Mohammed's proclamations were directly given. The lack of originality was made up f o r by the fact that Mohammed, with unwearied perseverance, announced these teachings as representing the vital interests of the community. With solicitous tenacity he proclaimed them to the masses in spite of their arrogant scorn. F o r no historical effect was connected with the silent protest of pious men before Mohammed's time, men who had protested, more by their lives than by their words, against the heathen Arabian interpretation of life. We do not know just what a certain Khalid ibn Sinan meant when he spoke of the prophet who let his people go astray. Mohammed is the first effective historical reformer of Arabia. Therein lies his originality in spite of the lack of it in the subject matter of his teaching. The intercourse which the travels of his early life secured f o r him, and the f r u i t s of which he garnered during the period of ascetic retirement, aroused the overwrought conscience of an earnest man against the religious and ethical character of his countrymen. Arabian polytheism, gross and bare as it was, and which f o r its fetishlike worship, had as its gathering place the national sanctuary,—the K a ' b a with its black stone—in Mohammed's home town, could not elevate the morals of a people imbued with tribal life and customs. F u r t h e r more, the natives of this town were marked by a prevailing materialistic, plutocratic and haughty attitude. F o r the care of the sanctuary was not only a religious privilege, but also an important source of revenue.

MOHAMMED AND ISLAM. Mohammed bemoans the oppression of the poor, the thirst f o r gain, dishonesty in commerce, and overbearing indifference toward the higher interest of human life and its duties toward the " p r a y e r f u l and pious o n e s " (Sura 18, v. 44),—the " t i n s e l of its mundane world." The impressions of former teachings remained active in him, and he now applied them to these disquieting observations. I n the loneliness of the caves near the city whither he was wont to withdraw, the man of two-score years felt himself more and more impelled through vivid dreams, visions and hallucinations to go among his people, and to warn them of the destruction to which their actions were leading them. He feels himself irresistably forced to become the moral teacher of his people, " t h e i r warner and messenger." I I I . At the beginning of his career these observations turned to eschatological representations, which more and more completely took possession of his inmost soul. They form, as it were, the " I d é e m è r e " of his proclamations. W h a t he had heard of a f u t u r e judgment which would overwhelm the world, he now applies to the conditions about him, the knowledge of which filled his soul with horror. He places before the careless, overweening tribes of the proud Meccan plutocrats, who know nothing of humility, " t h e prophecy of the approaching judgment, ' ' which he paints in fiery colors. He tells them of the resurrection and of the f u t u r e reckoning whose details present themselves to his wild vision in terrifying f o r m ; of God, as judge of the world, as the sole arbiter of the " D a y of j u d g m e n t , " who, in mercy, gathers out of the ruins of the world the few who had been obedient, who had not scorned and derided the cry of the " W a r n e r , " but who by introspection had torn themselves f r o m arrogant ambitions and the power secured by worldly wealth, and had given themselves to a realization of their dependence on the one absolute

MOHAMMED AND ISLAM. God of the universe. I t is above all eschatological representation on which Mohammed founded the call to repentance and submission. 1 And one result—not the cause—of this perception, is the rejection of the polytheism, by means of which paganism had broken the absolute power of deity. Any characteristic predicated of Allah can " n e i t h e r help nor h a r m . " There is only one Lord of the judgment day. Nothing can be associated with his unlimited and unchangeable decree. A feeling of such absolute dependence as that which possessed Mohammed could have as its object one being only, the only one Allah. But the terrible picture of the judgment, the features of which he had gathered largely f r o m the literature of the Apocrypha, was not balanced by the hopes of the coming of the " K i n g d o m of H e a v e n . " Mohammed is a messenger of the Dies Irae, of the destruction of the world. His eschatology, in its picture of the world, cultivates only the pessimistic aspect. The optimistic aspect is entirely t r a n s f e r r e d to paradise, f o r the chosen. He has no ray of hope left over f o r the mundane world. It is thus simply a system of borrowed building stones which serves the prophet in the construction of his eschatological message. The history of the Old Testament, mostly, it is true, in the sense of the Agada, is used as a warning example of the fate of ancient peoples, who, hardening their hearts, scorned the exhortations sent to them. Mohammed classes himself as the last of the ancient prophets. The picture of the judgment and destruction of the world painted in glowing colors, the exhortation to prepare f o r it, by forsaking ungodliness and the worldly life, tales of the f a t e of ancient peoples and their attitude toward the prophets sent to them, reference to the creation of the woiid, and to the wonderful formation of man,—proof of the power of God,—dependence of the creature whom he can annihilate and recreate according to his inclination,—all

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7

these are contained in the oldest p a r t s of that book of revelations, recognized in the literature of the world as the Koran. I t is composed of about 114 divisions (Suras), of very different scope; about one third belongs to the first ten years of Mohammed's prophetic activity during the time of his work in Mecca. IV. I t lies outside of my province to recount here the story of his success and his failures. The year 622 marks the first epoch in the history of Islam. Ridiculed by his countrymen and tribesmen, Mohammed flees to the northern city of Yathrib, whose people coming f r o m a southern stock, showed themselves more receptive to religious influences. Here also, owing to the large colony of Jews, the ideas which Mohammed advanced were more familiar, or at least appeared less strange. Because of the help which people of this town gave to the prophet and his followers, whom they sheltered, Yathrib became Medina, " t h e C i t y " (of the prophet), by which name it has ever since been known. Here Mohammed is still f u r t h e r inspired by the Holy Spirit, and the m a j o r i t y of the Suras of the K o r a n bear the mark of this new home. But even though, in his new relations, he does not cease to fulfill and practice his calling as a " w a r n e r , " his message takes a new direction. I t is no longer merely the eschatological visionary who speaks. The new relations make him a warrior, a conqueror, a statesman, an organizer of the new and constantly growing community. Islam, as an institution, here received its shape; here were sown the first seeds of its social, legal, and political regulations. The revelations which Mohammed announced on Meccan soil had, as yet, indicated no new religion. Religious feelings were aroused in a small group only. A conception of the world marked by the idea of resignation to God was fostered, but was, as yet, f a r removed f r o m strict definition, and had not yet given rise clearly

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to teachings and forms. Pious feelings betrayed themselves in ascetic acts, which we also find among Jews and Christians, in devotional acts (recitation with genuflections and prostration), self-imposed abstinence, and deeds of kindness, whose modality as to form, time and amount, had not yet been determined by hard and fast rules. Finally the community of believers was not yet definitely formed. It was in Medina that Islam took shape as an institution, and at the same time as a fighting organization whose war trumpet sounds through the whole later history of Islam. The erstwhile devoted martyr, who had preached patient submission to his faithful Meccan followers scorned by their fellow citizens, is now organizing warlike undertakings. The man who despised worldly possessions is now taking in hand the disposition of booty and regulation of the laws of inheritance and of property. It is true he does not cease to proclaim the worthlessness of all worldly things. At the same time, however, laws are given, regulations are made for religious practices and the closest social relationships of life. " H e r e the laws of conduct take on definite form. These laws served as the basis of later legislation, although several, in the course of preparation during the Meccan teachings, had been carried in embryo by the exiles from Mecca to the Palm City of A r a b i a . ' n It was really in Medina that Islam was born. The true features of its historical life were formed here. Whenever, therefore, the need of religious reconstruction appeared in Islam, its followers appealed to the Sunna (traditional custom) of that Medina in which Mohammed and his companions first began to bring into concrete form the laws regulating the relations of life, according to his conceptions of Islam. We will return to this later. The H i j r a (flight to Medina) accordingly is not only an important date in the history of Islam, because of the change it wrought in the outward fortunes of the

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community; marks, not only the time in which the little group of the prophet's followers, having found a secure haven, began to take aggressive measures and wage a war against the enemy, which in 630 resulted in the conquest of Mecca and subsequently in the subjection of Arabia; but it also marks an epoch in the religious formation of Islam. The Medina period brings about, moreover, a radical change in Mohammed's apperception of his own character. In Mecca Mohammed felt himself a prophet, and classed himself and his mission in the rank of the Biblical "Messengers," in order like them to warn and to save his fellow-men from destruction. In Medina, under changed external relations, his aims also take a different trend. In this environment, differing so greatly from that of Mecca, other views in regard to his calling as a prophet became prominent. He wishes now to be considered as having come to restore and reestablish the vitiated and misrepresented religion of Abraham. His announcements are interwoven with Abrahamic traditions. He asserts that the worship he is instituting, although formerly organized by Abraham, had in the course of time been vitiated and heathenized. He wishes to reinstate in the Abrahamic sense the dm, or religion of the one God, as he had come, above all, to legitimatize (musaddik) what God had made known in former revelations.2 In general, his contention, that the former messages were misrepresented and vitiated, played a greater part in the recognition of his own position as a prophet, and of his work. Fawning apostates strengthened him in the idea that adherents of the old religion had perverted the sacred writings, and had concealed the promises in which prophets and evangelists had announced his own future coming. This charge, originating in the Koran, was later extensively developed in Islamic literature.

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The polemic against Jews and Christians now forms an important p a r t of the revelations of Medina. Although formerly he recognized cloisters, churches and synagogues as true places of worship (Sura 22, v. 211), the ruhbcm (monks) of the Christians and the altbar (scribes) of the Jews, who were actually his teachers, now became objects of attack. I t does not suit him that these leaders, in reality merely selfish men, should exercise an entirely unwarranted, and in fact almost a divine authority, over their fellows (Sura 9, v. 31), leading the people astray f r o m the way of God (Sura 9, v. 36). He gives the ascetic ruhban credit f o r their humble bearing, and regards them as being in closer sympathy with the faithful than the Jews, who took a decisive stand against Islam (Sura 5, v. 85), and he reproaches the Scribes with additions they had made to the divine legislation ( S u r a 3, v. 72). Y. This Medina decade was therefore a time of attack with sword and pen, as well as of defense. The change in Mohammed's prophetic character necessarily made itself felt in the style and rhetorical content of the Koran. Even the oldest records of the book have clearly differentiated between the two divisions of the 114 Suras into which its contents are divided—differentiating with sure instinct the Mecca f r o m the Medina parts. This chronological difference wholly justifies the critical and aesthetic consideration of the Koran. To the Mecca period belong the messages in which Mohammed presents the creations of his glowing enthusiasm in a fantastic oratorical f o r m coming directly f r o m his soul. He does not brandish his sword, he is not speaking to warriors and subjects, but is declaring rather, to his numerous adversaries the convictions which dominate his soul; that the power of Allah to create and rule the world is infinite; that the awful day of judgment and destruction, the vision of which destroys his peace of

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mind, is near at h a n d ; that the former peoples and tyrants who opposed the warners sent by God, should be punished. Gradually, however, the prophetic energy weakens in the Medina messages in which the rhetoric, having lost all vigor, because of the triviality of the object, had dropped to a lower plain and sunk to the level of common prose. "With clever calculations and consideration, with w a r y cunning and policy, he now agitates against the internal and external opponents of his aims, he organizes the faithful, enacts, as has already been pointed out, civic and religious laws f o r the developing organization, as well as rules for the practical relations of life. He even at times includes in the divine revelations made to him his own unimportant personal and domestic affairs. 1 The diminishing of his rhetorical vigor is not offset even by the Saj',—the rhymed prose characteristic of the K o r a n in general and occurring also in the suras of this period. This was the f o r m in which the ancient soothsayers delivered their oracles. No A r a b could have recognized them in any other f o r m as the words of God. Mohammed, to the end, adhered to the claim that such was his speech, but how great a distance between the S a j ' of the early Mecca and the Medina speeches! While in Mecca, he announces his visions in S a j ' lines, every one of which responds to the feverish beating of his heart. This f o r m of revelation loses its swing and its strength in Medina, even when he turns back to the subjects of the Mecca messages. 2 Mohammed himself declared his K o r a n an inimitable work. His followers, without considering any one of its p a r t s as having more merit than another, regarded the book as divinely supernatural, sent to them through the prophet. I n fact it was to them the supreme miracle by which the prophet established the t r u t h of his divine mission.

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YI. The K o r a n then, is the first basis of the religion of Islam, its sacred writing, its revealed document. I n its entirety it represents a combination of the two first epochs in the infancy of Islam, differing so much f r o m one another. Although the Arabian mind, owing to its inherent disposition and to the conditions of life, was not given to the consideration of supernatural things, the great success of the prophet and his immediate followers over the opponents of Islam did much to strengthen the belief of the Arabs in his mission. Although these historical successes did not, as one is apt to think, directly result in the complete union of these A r a b tribes, politically divided and religiously only loosely bound by any central authority, and constantly quarreling over their local cults, nevertheless, they did become a strong element of union between these divergent elements. The prophet had held up as the ideal the union into an ethical and religious community which, according to his teachings, should be bound together by the feeling of dependence on the one Allah. " 0 , ye believers, f e a r God as he deserveth to be f e a r e d ; and die not until ye have become Moslems. And hold ye f a s t by the cord of God and remember God's goodness towards you, how that when ye were enemies, he united your hearts and by his f a v o r ye became b r e t h r e n " (Sura 3, v. 97-98). F e a r of God was now to have the preference over genealogy and tribal life. The conception of this unity broadened more and more a f t e r the death of the prophet, owing to the conquests whose successes have not yet been equalled in the history of the world. VII. If anything in Mohammed's religious production can be called original, it is the negative side of his revelations. They were intended to eliminate all the barbarities of Arabian paganism in worship and social intercourse, in tribal life and in their conceptions of the world; in

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other words, they were to eliminate the jahiliyya, the pre-Islamic barbarity, in so f a r as it stamped these conceptions and customs as opposed to Islam. As we have already mentioned, the positive teaching and organizations show an eclectic character. Judaism and Christianity have an equal share in the elements of which these are composed, of whose peculiarities I cannot speak here. 1 I t is well known that in its final f o r m Islam has five points upon which its confession is based. The first d r a f t s (liturgical and humanitarian) go back to the Mecca period, but their more definite, formal shape was given in the Medina period. 1. The acknowledgment of one God and the recognition of Mohammed as the apostle of God; 2. The ritual of the divine worship, whose early beginnings as vigils and recitations, with their accompanying postures, genuflections and prostrations, as well as the ceremonial purifications, had its origin in the usages of oriental Christianity; 3. Alms, first a free-will offering, later a definitely determined contribution to the needs of the community; 4. Fasting—-first on the 10th day of the month (an imitation of the Jewish Day of atonement {'ashura)—later changed to the month of Bamadan, the 9th of the variable lunar y e a r ; 5. The pilgrimage to the old Arabian national sanctuary in Mecca, the K a ' b a , the " h o u s e of God.' ' 2 This last requirement Mohammed retained f r o m paganism, but clothed it in monotheistic garb, and gave it new interpretations through Abrahamic legends. J u s t as the Christian elements of the K o r a n reached Mohammed largely through the apocryphal traditions and heresies disseminated throughout oriental Christendom, similarly many of the elements of oriental gnosticism found an entrance into Islamism. Mohammed appropriated a medley of ideas that reached him through his casual contact with men during his mer-

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cantile travels, and utilized most of this material in a very unsystematic manner. How f a r removed f r o m his original conception are the mystical words (Sura 24, v. 35) which the Moslems regard as their "golden t e x t ! " I n Mohammed's conception concerning the laws given by God to the Jews, especially those dealing with forbidden foods, laid on them as a punishment f o r their disobedience, we see the influence of the depreciation by the Gnostics of the Old Testament laws promulgated, according to them, by a frowning God void of benevolence. Except in a very few cases these laws were abrogated by Islam. God had not forbidden to the faithf u l anything palatable. These laws were fetters and burdens laid upon the Israelites by God (Sura 2, v. 286; 4, v. 158; 7, v. 156). This, although not identical with Marcionistic theories, is in accord with them. Together with this and closely akin to the speculations which are crudely indicated in the Clementine homilies, we find the theory put forward of a pure ancient religion, to be restored by the prophet, and also the assumption that the sacred writings had been corrupted. Besides Jews and Christians, the Parsees, whose disciples came under Mohammed's observation as Ma jus (Magi) and whom he also regards as opposed to heathenism, left their impress on the receptive mind of the Arabian prophet. I t was f r o m the Parsees that he received the far-reaching suggestion which robs the Sabbath of its character as a day of rest. He chose F r i d a y as the weekly day of assembly, but even in adopting the hexaemeron theory of creation, he emphatically rejects the idea that God rested on the 7th day. Therefore, not the 7th day, but the day preceding is taken, not as a day of rest, but as a day of assembly on which all worldly business is permitted a f t e r the close of worship. 4 V I I I . If we are now to regard Mohammed's produc-

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tion as a whole, and to consider for a moment its intrinsic value judged from its ethical effect, we must of course be careful to avoid an apologetic and polemic attitude. Even in modern presentations of Islam there is a strong tendency to take its numbers as the absolute standard by which to judge its religious value, and to found on that the final estimate. The same tendency considers the idea of God as deeply rooted in Islam because it inflexibly excludes the thought of His immanence. It also considers its ethics dangerous because it is dominated by the principle of obedience and submission which is already apparent in its name. This attitude assumes as possible that the dominating belief of the faithful, of living under an absolute divine law, or the belief in the detachment of the Divine being in Islam hindered the approach to God by faith, virtue, and benevolence, and kept one from His mercy (Sura 9, v. 100), as though a pious worshipper, fervent in his devotions, filled with the humble consciousness of his dependence, weakness and helplessness, raising his soul to the source of almighty strength and perfection, could differentiate himself according to philosophical formulae. Those, who would in a subjective spirit estimate the religion of others, should recall the words of Abbé Loisy, the theologian (1906) : "One can say of all religions that they possess for the consciences of its adherents an absolute, and for the comprehension of the philosopher and critic, a relative value." 1 This fact has generally been lost sight of in judging the effect of Islam on its followers. Furthermore, in the case of Islam the religion has been unjustly held responsible for moral deficiencies, and intellectual lacks which may have their origin in the disposition of the races.2 As a matter of fact, Islam, disseminated among a people belonging to these races, has moderated rather than caused their crudeness. Besides, Islam is not an abstraction to be considered apart from

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its historical periods of development, or from the geographical boundaries of its spread, or from the ethnic character of its followers, but in connection with its various embodiments and effects. In order to prove Islam's insignificant religious and moral value, men have appealed to the language in which its teachings were given. It has been said, e. g., that Islam lacks the ethical conception which we call conscience, and the attempt is made to prove this by the assertion that "neither in Arabic itself nor in any other language used by the Mohammedans can a word be found which would correctly express what we mean by the word conscience."3 Such conclusions could easily lead us astray in other lines. The assumption that a word alone can be taken as a credible proof of the existence of a conception, has shown itself to be a prejudice. " A lack in the language is not necessarily a sign of a lack in the heart." 4 If this were so, one could assert that the feeling of gratitude was unknown to the poets of the Yedas, because the word " t h a n k s " is foreign to the Vedic language. 5 Even in the ninth century the Arabic scholar Jâhiz disproves the remark of a dilettante friend who thought he found a proof of the avaricious character of the Greeks in the fact that their language apparently had no word for "liberality" (Jud). Others also have come to the conclusion that the lack of the word "sincerity" (nasïha) in Persian, was a sufficient proof of the inbred untrustworthiness of this people.6 Didactic sentences, principles mirroring ethical conceptions, should be tested by more than a word, a terminus technicus, such as those which are used in the consideration of the "question of conscience" in Islam. Among the forty (really forty-two) traditions of the Nawawï, supposed to present a compendium of the religious principles of a true Moslem, we find as No. 27,

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the following quotation, which is taken f r o m the best collections: " I n the name of the prophet, virtue is the essence of good qualities ; sin is that which troubles the soul, and thou dost not wish that other people should know it of t h e e . " Wàbisa ibn Ma'bad says: "Once I came before the prophet. He divined that I had come to question him as to the nature of virtue. He said: 'Question thine heart (literally demand a fetwâ, a decision of thine heart) ; virtue is that which pacifies the soul, and pacifies the h e a r t ; sin is that which produces unrest in the soul and turmoil in the bosom, whatever meaning men may have given to i t ! ' ' L a y thine hand upon thy bosom, and ask thine h e a r t ; f r o m that which causes thine heart unrest, thou shouldst forbear.' " And the same teachings gave the Moslem tradition according to which Adam ended his exhortation to his children just before his death with the words . . . " A s I approached the forbidden tree, I felt unrest in my heart, ' ' in other words, my conscience troubled me. I t would be u n j u s t to deny that a power working f o r good lives in the teaching of Islam, that life f r o m the standpoint of Islam can be ethically blameless ; or that it calls f o r mercy towards all the creatures of God, business integrity, love, faithfulness, self-restraint, all those virtues which Islam borrowed f r o m the religions whose prophets it recognized as its teachers. A true Moslem will exemplify a life which conforms to strict ethical requirements. Islam is indeed a law, and demands ceremonial acts also f r o m its adherents. Already in its earliest document—the Koran—and not only in the traditional teachings which indicate the development of Islam, do we find the feelings which accompany a deed described as the standard of its religious merit, and it is in the K o r a n also that legalism, unaccompanied by deeds of mercy and charity, is held of very little value.

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" T h e r e is no piety in turning your faces toward the east or the west, but he is pious who believeth in God, and the last day, and the angels, and the Scriptures, and the prophets; who f o r the love of God disburseth his wealth to his kindred, and to the orphans, and the needy, and the wayfarer and those who ask, and f o r ransoming; who observeth prayer, and payeth the legal alms, and who is of those who are f a i t h f u l to their engagements when they have engaged them, and patient under ills and hardships, and in time of trouble; these are they who are just, and these are they who f e a r the L o r d " (Sura 2, v. 172). And in speaking of the rites of the pilgrimage, which he decrees (or rather retained f r o m the traditions of Arabian paganism) on the ground that " w e have imposed sacrificial rites on all people, so that they may commemorate the name of God over the brute beasts which he hath provided f o r t h e m , " Mohammed lays the greatest emphasis on the pious f r a m e of mind which should accompany the act of worship. " B y no means can their flesh reach God, neither their blood; but piety on your p a r t reacheth h i m " ( S u r a 22, v. 35, 38). The greatest importance is placed on the IJcMas (unclouded purity) of the heart ( S u r a 40, v. 14) takivd al-hulub, " t h e piety of the h e a r t " (Sura 22, v. 23), kalb sallm " a perfect h e a r t " which accords with the lebh shalem of the Psalmist; standpoints which take into consideration the religious merit of the true believer. These convictions are carried still f u r t h e r , as we shall soon see, in the traditions, and spread over the whole field of religious life in the teachings concerning the significance of niyya,—the conviction that the purpose underlying all acts is the measure of religious deeds. The shadow of an egotistical or hypocritical motive, according to this precept, deprives every bonum opus of its worth. I t will, therefore, not be possible f o r any impartial judge to approve Tisdall's utterance: " I t will

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be evident, that purity of heart is neither considered necessary nor desirable; in fact, it would be hardly too much to say, that it is impossible f o r a Moslem.' ' 7 And which is the " s t e e p p a t h " (perhaps to be compared with the ' ' straight gate,'' Matth. 7:13, which leads to life) which the company of the privileged, those who are to share the joys of paradise, follow! I t is not the hypocritical life almost entirely devoted to the ceremonial—to the practices and forms of outward worship, that lies within this path, but rather the life devoted to good works. " I t is to f r e e the captive; or to feed, in a day of famine, the orphan who is of kin, or the poor man who lieth on the ground. Whoso doth this, belongs to those who believe and who recommend perseverance unto each other, these shall be the companions of the right h a n d " ( S u r a 90:12-18—compare with this the verses of Isaiah 58: 6-9). I n our next lecture we will show that the teachings of the K o r a n find a f u r t h e r development and supplement in a great number of traditional sayings, which, even though not coming directly f r o m the prophet, are nevertheless indispensable to the characterization of the spirit of Islam. We have already made use of several of them, and since, in accordance with the plan of this introductory lecture, we have examined the ethical value of historical Islam, as set f o r t h in the Koran, it may be proper at this point to point out that the dogmas which are given in the K o r a n in primitive but clear enough form, have developed in a different way in a great many of the later utterances ascribed to the prophet. To Abu D a r r f o r example he gives the following instruction: " A prayer in this mosque (in Medina) is of more value than thousands which are made in other mosques, with the exception of that in Mecca; the p r a y e r made in the latter is worth a hundred thousand times more than that which is performed in other mosques.

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But of more value than all these is the prayer offered in one's house, where one is seen by Allah alone, and which has no other aim than to draw one nearer to A l l a h . " (Compare with this Matth. 6-6.) " S h a l l I tell you"—it is reported of him elsewhere—"what indeed stands on a higher level than all praying, fasting and giving of alms? The reconciling of two enemies." " I f you"—so says 'Abdallah ibn ' O m a r — " b o w so much in prayer that your body becomes bent as a saddle, and f a s t so much that you become dry as a cord, God does not accept such until you accompany these acts with humility." " W h a t is the best f o r m of I s l a m ? " To this the prophet answers: " T h e best Islam is that thou shouldst feed the hungry, spread peace among friends and strangers (that is in all the w o r l d ) . " " H e who does not r e f r a i n f r o m falsehood, of what use is his abstention f r o m food and drink to m e ? " " N o one enters paradise who causes h a r m to his neighbors." Abu Hureira r e p o r t s : " S o m e one was telling the prophet about a woman who was famous f o r her praying, fasting and almsgiving, but nevertheless slandered her neighbors greatly with her tongue." " S h e belongs in h e l l " decreed the prophet. Then the same man told of another woman who was noted f o r her carelessness in the matter of prayer and fasting, but was in the habit of giving whey (leben) to the needy, and never spoke ill of her neighbors. ' ' She belongs in p a r a d i s e ' ' declared the prophet. These quotations and numerous parallel sayings, which could easily be collected, do not represent simply the observations of ethically minded people, but indicate rather (perhaps owing to a polemic attitude toward spreading hypocrisy) the general attitude of dogmatic Islam. We are not told that holiness is dependent only on the practice of formal laws. " T o believe in God»and p e r f o r m pious deeds," that is, deeds of philanthropy—

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comprehends more and more the conception of the life acceptable to God. I t is specially when the question of formalism in religious conduct is under consideration that emphasis is placed largely on s p l a t ; i. e., submission to the omnipotence of Allah to be manifested through the general liturgy; and z a k a t ; i. e., the f u r t h e r i n g of the interests of the community by taking p a r t in the required contributions, in connection with which the care of the poor, widows, orphans and travelers are the first to arouse the lawgiver's sense of duty. To be sure, Islam, in its development under the cooperation of foreign influences, has engrafted the subtlety of the casuists and the hypercriticism of the dogmatists, and has allowed shrewd speculations to strain and artificialize its obedience to God and its faith. We shall presently see this process of development, but we shall also come face to face again with efforts which mark a reaction against this growth. IX. Let us now consider some of the darker sides of Islam. If Islam held itself strictly to historical witnesses, it could not offer its followers the ethical mode of life of one man as an example; an " i m i t a t i o " of Mohammed would be impossible. But it is not to the historical picture that the believer turns. The pious legends about the ideal Mohammed early take the place of the historical man. The theology of Islam has conformed to the demand f o r a picture which does not show him merely as the mechanical organ of the divine revelation and its spread among unbelievers, but also as hero and example of the highest virtue. 1 Mohammed himself did not apparently desire this. God had sent him " a s a witness, clS 8b mediator of a hateful and warring message, as a crier to Allah, with his consent as a, shining t o r c h " (Sura 33, v. 44-45). He is a guide, but not a paragon, except in his hope in God and in the last day, and in his diligent devotion

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(v. 21). The realization, of his human weaknesses seem to have honestly influenced him, and he wishes to be regarded by his followers as a man with all the faults of ordinary mortals. His work was greater than his person. He did not feel that he was a saint, and he did not wish to pass as one. "We will return to this question when we come to the consideration of the dogmas concerning his sinlessness. Perhaps it is this very consciousness of human weakness which makes him reject all claim to miracles, which in his time and surroundings were considered necessary attributes of holiness. And we must also take into account his progress in the fulfilment of his mission, especially during the Medina period when conditions finally changed him from a suffering ascetic into a warrior and the head of a state. It is the merit of an Italian scholar, Leone Caetani, to have put before us in a very interesting work, "Annali dell' Islam," the worldly view in the oldest history of Islam. In this work, the writer carries out more sharply than has even been done before, a comprehensive critical review of the sources of the history of Islam. He makes many important corrections in the ideas about the activity of the prophet himself. It is indeed clear, that the saying ' ' More slayeth word than sword" cannot apply to his Medina work. With the departure from Mecca the times ended in which he " t u r n e d away from unbelievers" (Sura 15, v. 94) or "called them to the way of God merely through wisdom and good counsel" (Sura 16, v. 126); rather the time had come when the command sounded: ' ' When the sacred months are passed, kill the unbelievers wherever you find them; seize them, oppress them, and set yourselves against them in every ambush" (Sura 9, v. 5). " F i g h t in the path of G o d " (Sura 2, v. 245). From the visions of the destruction of this evil world, he formed with rapid transition the conception of a

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kingdom which is to be of this world. His character inevitably suffered many an i n j u r y arising f r o m the political change in Arabia due to the success of his preaching, as well as to his own leadership. He brought the sword into the world, and " i t is not only with the staff of his mouth that he smites the world, and not only with the breath of his lips that he kills the Godless," it is a true war trumpet which he sounds, it is the bloody sword which he wields to bring about his kingdom. According to an Islamic tradition giving a correct account of his life, he is said to be known in the Thora as " T h e prophet of battle and w a r . " 2 The conditions of the community, which he felt it was his divine calling to influence, were such that he could not confidently rely on the assurance: " A l l a h will fight f o r you, but you can rest in peace." He had to wage an earthly battle to attain recognition f o r his teachings and still more f o r their mastery. And this earthly war was the legacy he left to his successors. Peace was to him no virtue. "Believers obey God and the Apostle: and render not your works vain. . . Be not fainthearted then, and invite not the infidels to peace when ye have the upper hand, f o r God is with you, and will not defraud you of the recompense of your w o r k s " (Sura 47, v. 35, 37). Fighting must go on until " t h e word of God has the highest place." Not to take p a r t in this war counted as an act of indifference to the will of God. Love of peace toward the heathen who hold back f r o m the path of God is anything but virtue. " T h o s e believers that sit at home free f r o m trouble, and those who do valiantly in the cause of God with their substance and their persons, shall not be treated alike. God hath assigned to those who contend earnestly with their persons and with their substance, a rank above those who sit at home. Goodly promises hath he made to all. But God hath assigned to the strenuous a rich recom-

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pense, above those who sit at home. Rank of his own bestowal, and forgiveness and mercy, for God is indulgent, Merciful" (Sura 4, v. 97, 98). X. This association (entanglement) with the interests of the world, the position of continuous readiness for war which forms the framework of the second part of Mohammed's career as his character became corrupted by worldly ambition, influenced also the outward form of the higher conceptions of his religion. The choice of war as the means, and victory as the aim, of his prophetic calling, influenced also his conception of God whom he now wished to clothe with power by resort to arms. It is true, he apprehended the deity " i n whose p a t h " he waged his wars and performed his diplomatic acts, as monotheistic, clothed with powerful attributes. He unites absolute authority, unlimited power for recompense, severity towards stubborn evil-doers, with the attribute of mercy and gentleness (halim); he is tolerant toward the sinner and forgiving toward the repentant. " Y o u r Lord hath laid down for himself a law of mercy" (Sura 6, v. 54). As a commentary on this appears the tradition: " W h e n God had completed the creation he wrote in the book which is preserved near him on the heavenly throne: My mercy is stronger than my anger." 1 Even when " h e smites with his punishment whomsoever he pleases, his mercy embraces all things" (Sura 7, v. 155). Nor is the attribute of love lacking among those ascribed to him by Mohammed. Allah is wadud, "loving." " I f ye love God, follow me, and God will love you and forgive your sins." Verily, "God does not love the unbelievers" (Sura 3, v. 92). But lie is also the God of war, which his prophets and their followers were to wage against the enemy. And it was inevitable that many mythological elements should enter into this attribute in Mohammed's conception of God, as for instance, the all-powerful warrior resists the

MOHAMMED AND ISLAM.

25

intrigues and perfidies of the enemy, continually opposing them with cunning even more powerful. For, according to an ancient Arab proverb, " W a r f a r e is cunning." " T h e y think of cunning—and I (also) think of cunning" (Sura 86, v. 15, 16). God characterizes the manner of war which he uses against the gainsayers of his revelations, as "efficient" cunning: " W e will lead them by degrees to their ruin, by ways which they know n o t " (Sura 68, v. 45 — 7, v. 182). The word heid—-a harmless kind of cunning and intrigue—is used throughout this passage. 2 The expression makr, denoting deeper cunning, is stronger; Palmer translates it in one place as c r a f t ; in another as plot, and again as stratagem. It includes, however, the idea of wiles (intrigue). ( " T h e y practice wiles against our signs. Say: God is swifter in the performing of wiles" [Sura 8, v. 30].) This is not true only in regard to the contemporary enemies of Allah and of his message, who manifest their enmity in fighting and persecuting Mohammed. God is said to have acted in the same way toward the earlier pagan peoples who scorned the prophets sent to them; toward the Thamudites for resisting Salih who was sent to them (Sura 27, v. 51), toward the Midianites to whom was sent the prophet Shu'eib, the Jethro of the Bible (Sura 7, v. 95-97). One must not think that Mohammed conceived of Allah ciS £L performer of intrigues. The real meaning to be taken from his threatening utterances, is that God treats each one according to his actions, 3 and that no human intrigue avails against God, who frustrates all false and dishonorable acts, and, anticipating the evil plans of the enemy, turns betrayal and stratagem away f r o m the faithful. 4 " T h a t God will ward off mischief f r o m believers, for God loveth not the false, the infidel" (Sura 22, v. 39). Mohammed's own political attitude toward the hindrances which beset him is mirrored in the action

26

MOHAMMED AND ISLAM.

which he attributes to the Lord of the world against intrigues and evil-doers. His own inclinations and his militant methods in dealing with the internal adversary 3 are ascribed to God in whose Cause Ms wars are waged. " O r if thou fear treachery from any people, throw their treaty to them as thou fairly mayest, for Clod loveth not the treacherous. And think not that the infidels shall escape us. They shall not weaken God" (Sura 8, v. 60). It is true that the terminology betrays rather the tone of a calculating diplomat, than that of a patient martyr. "We must emphatically recognize that it has not influenced the ethics of Islam, which forbid 8 perfidious action even towards unbelievers. Nevertheless in Mohammed's conception of the deity the moment Allah is brought down from his transcendental height to the level of an active co-worker with the prophets entangled in the battles of this world, outcroppings of mythology betray themselves. So the transition from the sway of the sombre eschatological ideas which filled his soul and his prophecies at the beginning of his career, to the mundane struggle so zealously carried on and so prominent in the final outcome, was completed in the outward growth of Mohammed's work. In this way historical Islam was stamped with the impress of religious warfare, in strong contrast to the beginning when a permanent kingdom in a world destined to destruction did not come within the range of his vision. That which Mohammed leaves behind as a legacy for the future conduct of his community is embodied in what he enacted in his Arabian environment; i. e., to fight unbelievers and to spread the kingdom of Allah's power, rather than of faith. According to this, the first duty of the Moslem warrior is the subjection of the unbeliever rather than his conversion. 7 XI. Various views have been expressed concerning the question whether Mohammed's horizon was limited to his native country of Arabia, or whether the con-

MOHAMMED AND ISLAM.

27

sciousness of his prophetic calling had a wider vision; in other words, whether he felt he was called to be a national or a world prophet. 1 I think we should incline to the second proposition. 2 I t is of course natural that he should interpret his inward call, and his anxiety over the condemnation of the unjust, as applying first of all to those nearest him, who, because of their condition, aroused him to a perception of his calling as a prophet. " W a r n your nearest relatives," he gives as God's command (Sura 26, v. 214). He was sent " t o w a r n the mother of cities and those living in its neighborhood" (Sura 6, v. 92). But undoubtedly, even at the very beginning of his mission, his inner perception was already directed to a broader sphere, although his limited geographical horizon would prevent his suspecting the boundaries of a world religion. At the very beginning of his mission he asserts that Allah had sent him rahmatan lil- alamma, " o u t of mercy f o r the w o r l d " (Sura 21, v. 107). I t is a commonplace in the K o r a n that God's instruction was given as dikrun lil-alamina "remembrance of the w o r l d . " EiVtw /coafiov airavra . . . irdarj Trj KTlaei (Mark 16:15); (Koran 12, v. 104; 38, v. 87; 68, v. 52; 81, v. 27). This 'alamun is constantly used in the K o r a n in all its various meanings. God is " l o r d of the ' a l a m u n . " He has adopted the differences in speech and color amongst men as signs of the 'alamun (Sura 30, v. 21). This is surely mankind in its widest sense. I n the same sense Mohammed extends his mission over the whole area indicated by this word according to his own understanding of it. His point of departure is naturally his own people and country. Nevertheless, the connections which, toward the end of his career, he aspired to make with foreign powers, and the other undertakings planned by him, show a striving towards lands beyond Arabia. His goal, according to a remark of Noldeke, extended to territories in which he was sure to meet the

28

MOHAMMED AND ISLAM.

Roman enemy. The last of the expeditions which he urged upon his warriors was an attack on the Byzantine kingdom. And the great conquests undertaken directly after his death, carried out by those most familiar with his views, are indeed the best commentaries on his own desires. Islamic tradition itself, in various utterances of the prophet, indicates that he was convinced of having a mission to all mankind; to the red and black alike. 3 It emphasizes the universal characteristic of his mission to the farthest boundaries imaginable. 4 According to tradition the prophet voices, in unmistakable words, the thought of the conquest of the world and foretells it in symbolic acts; indeed, it even finds in the Koran (Sura 48, v. 61) the promise of the imminent conquest of the Iranic and Roman states. 6 Naturally we cannot follow the Moslem theologians as f a r as this. But making due allowance for their exaggerations for reasons pointed out, we must still grant that Mohammed had already begun to imagine a great power spreading f a r beyond the boundaries of the Arabian nation, and including a large p a r t of mankind. Shortly after the death of its founder it begins its victorious course in Asia and Africa. XII. In a comprehensive characterization of Islam it would be a gross error to place the principal importance on the Koran, or to found a judgment of Islam simply on this sacred book of the Moslem community. It covers at the most only the first two decades in the development of Islam. Throughout the entire history of Islam the Koran remains as a divine foundation deeply reverenced by the followers of the religion of Mohammed. It is the object of a veneration such as has hardly yet been given to any other book in the literature of the world. 1 Even though, RS JEl matter of course, later Islam constantly turns back to it as a standard by which to measure the product of all ages, and believes it to be, or at

MOHAMMED AND ISLAM.

29

least, strives to be in harmony with it; we must not lose sight of the fact that it does not by any means suffice for an understanding of historical Islam. Owing to his own mental changes, as well as to various personal experiences, Mohammed himself was forced to nullify several Koranic revelations by means of newer divine revelations, thereby conceding that he abrogated by divine command that which, a short time before, had been revealed as the word of God. We must therefore be prepared for the concessions which appear when Islam crosses its Arabian boundaries and sets itself up as a world power! We cannot understand Islam without the Koran, but the Koran does not by any means afford us a complete understanding of Islam in its course through history. I n our next lectures we shall consider more in detail the phases of development which led Islam beyond the Koran.

30

MOHAMMED AND ISLAM. NOTES.

I. 1. "Inleidung tot de Godsdienst wetenschap" (Amsterdam 1899) 177 ff. I I . 1. This syncretic characteristic has been finally proved by K. Völlers in an analysis of the " Chidher-legends " in which he has found, together with Jewish and Christian elements, also late echoes of Babylonian and Hellenistic mythology. Archiv für Religionswissenchaft 1909. X I I 277 ff. 2. Hubert Grimme has lately emphasized the influence of the ideas prevalent in S. Arabia, especially in his "Mohammed" (Munich 1904) and in the "Orientalischen Stadien" (Nöldeke-Festschrift) 453 ff. 3. Harnack, " D i e Mission und Ausbreitung des Christentums" 93, above. I I I . 1. Kultur d. Gegenw. 94, 12-23 fr. below. IV. 1. Ibid. 95. 12 fr. below ff. 2. This point of view was established by C. Snouck Hurgronje in his first work " H e t Mekkaansche F e e s t " (Leiden 1880). V. 1. This peculiarity has been noticed by the Moslems themselves. Therefore, the following account concerning Abü Ruhm al-Ghifäri, a comrade of the prophet, is characteristic. During an expedition he rode at the prophet's side on a she-camel. The two animals came so near together that Abü Ruhm's rather thick sandals rubbed the prophet's leg causing him great pain. The prophet gave vent to his wrath by striking Abü Ruhm's foot with his riding whip. The latter, however, was in great perturbation " a n d " he says himself, " I feared, that a Koranic revelation would be given about me, because I had been the cause of this dreadful thing." Ibn Sa'd, Biographies IV. I, 180, 4-9. 2. Cf. Nöldeke, "Geschichte des K o r a n s " (Göttingen 1860) p. 49. (New Edition by Sehwally, Leipzig 1909 p. 63). 3. Nevertheless Moslem theologians do not wish to deny that certain parts of the Koran are more important in content, than others. This point of view, sanctioned also by the orthodox, is established by Taki al-din ibn Teymiyya. Jawab ahl al-imän fi tafädul äy al-Kur'än (Cairo 1322; Brockelmann, Hist, of Arabic Lit. I I 104, No. 19). VI. 1. Cf. R. Geyer in WZKM (1907) XXI 400. V I I . 1. For the Jewish elements see A. J . Wensinck's dissertation, "Mohammed en de Joden te Medina" (Leiden 1908). C. H. Becker's work deals with the later development, but it also throws light on the early history. "Christentum und I s l a m " (Tübingen 1907). 2. For this summary of the five principal duties see Bükhäri, Imän

NOTES.

31

No. 37, Tafsir No. 208, which also contains the oldest formula of the Moslem creed. I t would be useful for the understanding of the earliest development of Moslem morals, to investigate what duties f r o m time to time were considered in old documents fundamental to the belief and religious practice of Islam. "We would like to mention one which in a speech attributed to Mohammed is added as a sixth to the five points mentioned in the text and recognized since ancient times as one of the fundamentals of Islam : ' 1 That thou shouldst offer to men what thou desirest should be offered to thee, and that thou shouldst avoid doing to men what thou dost not wish to be done to injure t h e e . " (Ibn S a ' d V I 37, 12 ff.; Vsd al-ghaba I I I 266, cf. 275 of the same group.) This last teaching, taken by itself, appears as a detached speech of Mohammed. The 13th of the 40 traditions of the Nawawi (according to Bukhârî and Muslim): " n o n e of you is a true believer until he desires f o r his brother, that which he desires f o r h i m s e l f . " Cf. Ibn Kuteiba, d. Wiistenfeld 203, 13. A similar saying by ' A l i ibn Husein, Yâ'kubï, Annales ed Houtsma I I 364, 6 (3). 3. Cf. now Martin Hartmann " D e r I s l a m " (Leipzig 1909) p. 18. 4. Cf. my treatise on " D i e Sabbath institution in I s l a m " (Gedenkbuch fiir D. Kaufmann, Breslau 1900; p. 89. 91). V I I I . 1. " R e v u e Critique et L i t t é r a i r e . " 1906 p. 307. 2. See C. H . Becker's excellent remarks in the treatise: " 1 s t der Islam eine Gefehr fiir unsere Kolonien. " (Koloniale Eundschau, May 1909, 290 ff.). Cf. also " L ' I s l a m et l ' é t a t m a r o c a i n " by Ed. Michaux Bellaire in the Eevue du Monde Musulman 1909, V I I I 313 ff. f o r the refutation of the widespread opinion, that the principles of Islam hinder practical progress. 3. Tisdall, " T h e Eeligion of the Crescent" (London 1906; Society for promoting Christian knowledge) 62. 4. Sproat, " S c e n e s and Studies of Savage L i f e " quoted by E. Westermark, ' ' The Origin and Development of the Moral Ideas ' ' I I (London 1908) 160, with numerous examples. Because of the lack of an equivalent for the word " i n t e r e s t i n g , " Turkish and Arabic people have as wrongly jumped to the conclusion that the races whose native languages these are, lack intellectual curiosity. (Duncan B. Macdonald, " T h e Eeligious Attitude and L i f e in I s l a m " (Chicago 1909) 121 and Ibid. 122, the quotation from " T u r k e y in E u r o p e " by Odysseus.) 5. Oldenberg, " T h e Eeligion of the V e d a " (Berlin 1894) 305, 9. 6. " L e Livre des A v a r e s " ed. G. van Vloten (Leiden 1900) 212, 3 ff. 7. Tisdall 1. c. 88. I X . 1. I t is the most zealous aim of the pious to imitate even in the smallest details the Mohammed of the legends gifted with the

MOHAMMED AND ISLAM. highest perfections. This imitation a t first had as its object not so much the ethical points of view as the manner of the ritualistic observances and of the outward habits of life. 'Abdallah, the son of 'Omar, who in all things adopted the " i m i t a t i o " in this sense as his duty, was considered the most scrupulous follower of al-amr al-awwal, " o f former t h i n g s " (Ibn S a ' d IV, 1 106, 22). He tried during his expeditions always to halt where the prophet had halted, to pray everywhere where the prophet had prayed, to let his camel rest wherever the prophet's camel had rested. A tree was pointed out under which the prophet once rested. Ibn 'Omar carefully supplied this tree with water, so that it should be preserved and not wither. (Nawawi, Tahdib 358.) In the same way they strove to imitate the habits of the "companions of the p r o p h e t . " Their behavior is an example f o r true believers. (Ibn 'Abdalbarr al-Namari, J ami' bayan al-'ttm wa-fadlilii (Cairo 1326, ed. Mahmasani, 157); this is indeed the substance of all Sunna. The theological presentation of the prophet's biography starts from the point of view that the prophet himself believed that every detail of his actions in religious practice would count in the future. He, therefore, once omitted a formality so that the f a i t h f u l should not make it Sunna (Ibn S a ' d I I I 131, 19). I t was natural to expect that Mohammed should soon be regarded as an ethical example. There is a great deal of literature on this subject. The theologian of Cordova Abu Muhammad 'All ibn Hazm (d. 456/1069), known for his unbending traditionalism in dogma and law, advances this ethical claim in his treatise on the ' ' Habit and Elevation of S o u l ' ' (Kitab-al-alchlak walsiyar fi mudawat al-nufus) which also deserves attention because the writer has included " C o n f e s s i o n s " in i t : "Whoever strives for the blessedness of the other world and the wisdom of this, for justice in behavior, and for the union of all good qualities, as well as for the merit of all virtues: he can follow the example of the prophet Mohammed, and as f a r as he is able, imitate his qualities and his manners. May God help us with His grace, that we may be able to resemble this p a r a g o n . ' ' (Cairo 1908, ed. Mahmasani p. 21.) But there was a step beyond this. Although belonging to a period of thought to be treated in a later division, we must nevertheless add in this connection, that a t a higher level of development of Moslem ethics under the influence of Sufiism (Chapter I V ) it became an ethical ideal that one should strive to realize (manifest) the " q u a l i t i e s of G o d " in one's daily life. Compare the Greek point of view " t o follow G o d " with the Jewish point of view expressed in the Talmud (Sota 14a.) and in Sifre, (Deut. 49, ed. Friedmann p. 85a, 16).

NOTES.

2. 1.

2. 3. 4.

33

Even the old Sufi Abii-l-Husein al-Nuri assumes this as an ethical aim ( ' A t t a r , Tadkirat al-awliyd ed. K. A. Nicholson, London 1907 I I 55, 1). Ibn 'Arab!, from this standpoint of the imitation of God, demands the virtue of showing kindness to one's enemy. (Journ. Boy. As. Soc. .1906, p. 819, 10.) Under the influence of his Sufiistic religious views Ghazali shows up an exhaustive summary of the preceding discussion as follows: ' ' The perfection and happiness of man consist in the striving f o r the realization of the qualities of God and also in adorning oneself with the true essence of His a t t r i b u t e s . ' ' I n the introduction to his " F a t t i h a t ' a l - u l u m " (Cairo 1322) he gives as a Hadith the saying: takhallaTcu M-alchlak illahi (to try to acquire the qualities of -Allah). This is supposed to give deeper significance to the idea of the names of God (al-Maksad al-asnd, Cairo, 1322, p. 23 if.). Isma'il al-Fiiranl (c. 1485) reflects Ghazali's point of view in his commentary to Alfarabi (ed. Horten, Zeitschr. f u r Assyriol. X X 350). This conception of the ethical aim, in the case of the §ufis, was also influenced by the Platonic conception, that the desired escape from mortal nature (SVTJTT] (pvcns) lay in " b e i n g as much like God as possible." (Theaet. 176 B. Staat 613 A.) According to later Greek scholars " g r o w i n g in likeness (tashabbuh = 6/xoiWis) to the creator according to m a n ' s measure of s t r e n g t h " ( A l f a r a b i ' s " P h i l osophische Abhandlungen " ed. F. Dieterici, Leiden 1890, 53, 15 and often in the writings of the " P u r e B r e t h r e n " ) is given by the Arabian philosophers as the practical aim of philosophy. Sufiism, however, goes a step further in the definition of the summum bonum, to which we will return further on. " O r i e n s C h r i s t i a n s " 1902, 392. Bukhari, Taulud No. 15. 22. 28. 55. J . Barth (Festschrift f u r Berliner, F r a n k f u r t a. M. 1903, 38 No. 6) brings this speech into a summary of the Midrashic elements in Moslem tradition. Several commentators place in this group Sura 13, V 14. cf. Kali, Amali (Bulak, 1324) I I 272. Cf. Hupfeld-Biehm, Commentary to Ps. 18, 27. The common saying: Allah yakhiin al Tcha'in (Allah betrays the treacherous) is explained in this sense: cf. khada'atm khada' aha Allah (they have deceived me, may Allah deceive them) (Cf. Sura 4, v. 141) Ibn S a ' d V I I I 167, 25. Mu'awiyya in a threatening address to the resisting ' I r a k i a n s is said to have used the words: ' ' For Allah is strong in attack and in punishment, he defrauded those who practice perfidy against h i m . " Tabari I 2913, 6. If then malar and Tceid, which are ascribed to God, mean nothing but the frustration of the opponent's cunning, then the phrase Malcr Allah has passed from the Koran into the speech of Islam

MOHAMMED AND ISLAM.

34

5. 6. 7. XI. 1.

2.

3.

4.

5. X I I . 1.

and been unobjectionably appropriated by it, even in associations which do not fall under that interpretation. A very favorite Mohammedan supplication is : " We seek refuge with Allah from the Makr Allah (Sheikh Hureyfish, Kitab dl-raud al-fâ'ilc fi-l-mawâ'iz wal-ràkâ'ïk, Cairo 1310, p. 10, 16; 13, 26) which belongs in the group of prayers in which one seeks help from God with God. (Cf. ' A t t a r , Tadlcirat al-auliyâ I I , 80, 11; ZDMG X L V I I I 98.) Among the prophet's prayers, which the faithf u l are commanded to use, the following plea is also mentioned: ' ' Help me and not those against me, practice makr for my good, but do not practice it for my evil." Nawawï, Adkâr (Cairo 1312) p. 175, 6 according to tradition Tirmidï I I 272. This formula is found in still stronger form in the prayer-book of the Shiites Sahifakâmïla (see Noldeke-Festschrift 314 below) 33, 6 : cf. also the following speech: " E v e n if one of my feet were standing in paradise, and the other was still outside, I should not feel safe from the Makr Allah" (Subkï, Tabakât al-SJmfi'iyya I I I 56, 7 below) cf. ' A t t a r 1. c. I I 178, 21. The Moslems themselves take this expression as meaning the "unavoidable severe punishment of God. ' ' Cf. especially Ibn S a ' d I I , I 31, 14. Ibid. IV, I 26 above. The oldest battles of Islam are set forth from this point of view in the ' ' Annali dell Islam ' ' by Leone Caetani, vol. I I passim. Cf. now also Lammens, " É t u d e s sur le regno du Calife Omaiyade M o ' â w i a " I 422 (in Mélanges de la Faculté orientale de l'Université Saint Joseph III—1908—286), which rejects the acceptance of the early conception of Islam as a world of religion. I agree with Noldeke's view (in his review of Caetani's work, Wiener Zeitschrift f. d. Kunde d. Morgenlandes XXI—1907—307). Noldeke there emphasizes the passages in the Koran in which Mohammed (already in Mecca) feels himself to be a messenger and warner Tcâffatan lil-nâs ' ' to all mankind. ' ' i. e. Arabians and Non-Arabians. (Muhammudansche Studien I 269.) But already the old interpreter, Mujâhid, assigns the expression " t h e r e d " to men, " t h e b l a c k " to the jinn ( " M u s nad A h m e d " V, 145 below). I t gives a scope to this universality which exceeds the circle of mankind, in truth, so that not only the jinn are included, but in a certain sense, the angels also. Ibn H a j a r al-Heitamï in his Fatâwl Hadithiyya (Cairo 1307) 114 ff. gives a lengthy explanation of the Moslem view of this question. Ibn S a ' d I I , I 83, 25. However one may judge of the rhetorical worth of the Koran, one cannot deny an existing bias. The people who were appointed to the unsettled parts, (under the Caliph Abu Bekr and 'Othmân)

NOTES.

35

fulfilled their task at times in a very bungling way. With the exception of the oldest short Mecca Suras, which the prophet, even before his flight to Medina, had used as liturgical texts, and which, being detached, short, isolated pieces, were in little danger of change from being edited, the sacred book, especially several of the Medina Suras, often present a picture of disorder, of lack of unity, which caused a great deal of trouble and difficulty to the later expounders, who were obliged to regard the given sequence as inviolable. I f one is to attack the text of the Koran as was lately urged by Rudolf Geyer (Gott Gel. Anz. 1909, 5 1 ) , with a view to producing " a n edition truly critical and in accord with the conclusions of science," one must also take into account the removal of verses from the original context as well as interpolations. (Of. August Fischer, in the Noldeke-Festschrift 33 if.) The confused character of the collection appears very clearly in the survey which Noldeke has given concerning the order of detached Suras, in his " H i s t o r y of the K o r a n " (1 ed. pp. 70-174; 2 ed. pp. 87-234). The assumption of interpolations sometimes helps us to explain the difficulties. I should like to demonstrate this by an example. In the 246th Sura (from verse 27 on) we are told how decent people are to visit each other, how they are to announce themselves, how they are to greet the inmates, and how women and children should then behave. The precepts concerning these relationships have fallen into confusion because from v. 32-34 and from v. 35-56 digressions have been introduced which are only loosely connected with the main theme. (See Noldeke-Schwally p. 211.) Finally at v. 57 the announcement of the visit is again taken up till v. 59. Then v. 60 says: " I t is no restriction for the blind and no confinement for the lame and no confinement for you yourselves, that you eat (in anyone) of your houses, or in the houses of your mothers, or in the houses of your brothers, or in the houses of your sisters, or in the houses of your paternal uncles, or in the houses of your paternal aunts, or in the houses of your maternal uncles, or in the houses of your maternal aunts, or of any house of which you have the key, or of your friend. I t lays no crime on you, whether you eat apart or together. (61) And when you enter a house, then greet each other with a greeting from Allah, fortunate and good.'' Mohammed here gives his people permission to sit freely at table with their relatives, to allow themselves to be invited to eat even with female blood-relatives. One can't overlook the fact that the first words of v. 60, which extends the liberty of the blind, lame and ill, in their natural connection have nothing to do with the subject. An author writing of "Medicine in the K o r a n " has taken this connection very seriously and has added

MOHAMMED AND ISLAM. the criticism to the f a c t that indeed the company of the blind and lame at meals was not harmful, that, ' ' on the contrary, a meal in common with a sick person can be very dangerous from the standpoint of health. Mohammed would have done better not to object to the disinclination to i t . " (Opitz, " D i e Medizin im K o r a n , " Stuttgart 1906, 63.) But upon closer consideration, we see that this passage so foreign to the subject matter was introduced from another group. I t did not originally concern itself with the question of taking part in meals outside of one's own house, but rather with taking part in the warlike undertakings of young Islam. I n the Sura 48 v. 11-16, the prophet declaims against those " A r a b i a n s who remain b e h i n d , " who did not take p a r t in the warlike expeditions, and threatens them with severe divine punishment. To that he adds v. 17: " I t is no compulsion (leisa . . . harajun) for the blind, and it is no compulsion for the lame, and it is no compulsion for the sick''—in the text word for word like Sura 24 v. 60a—, i. e., the remaining away of such people or of those seriously prevented f o r some other reason, counts as pardoned. This saying has now been introduced into other connections as a foreign element, and has apparently influenced the editing of the verse whose original beginning has not been construed in a right way. Even Moslem commentators, although without recognizing an interpolation, have tried to explain the words according to their natural meaning as a pardon to those who remain away from battle on account of bodily inability; but they must submit to the objection to this view, that according to it, the passage in question " d o e s not accord with what precedes and what follows." (Baidawl, ed. Fleischer I I 31, 6.)

C H A P T E R II. THE DEVELOPMENT OF LAW. I. I n Anatole F r a n c e ' s narrative " S u r la P i e r r e Blanche'' a group of learned men, interested in the f a t e of the ancient world, discuss in friendly conversation, serious questions of religious history. I n the course of this exchange of thoughts he puts into the mouth of one of them: " Q u i fait une religion ne sait pas ce qu'il f a i t , " that is ' ' Seldom does the founder of a religion know the possible historical extent of his creation.'' This is remarkably true of Mohammed. Even if we must grant that a f t e r the successes which he himself gained in battle, the thought of Islam's sphere of power extending f a r beyond the boundaries of his own country, hovered before his mental vision, still, on the other hand, the institutions organized by him could not provide f o r the extensive relations into which conquering Islam was very soon to enter. But the objects looming largest in Mohammed's horizon were a f t e r all those of the immediate future. Even under his immediate followers, the first caliphs, the community of Islam, growing out of the religious body which it had been in Mecca and out of the primitive political organization to which it had developed in Medina, is already on its way to become a world power— a growth partly owing to inward consolidation, p a r t l y also to propagation by conquest. I n the mother country as well as in the conquered provinces, new relations were constantly emerging, which demanded regulating. I t was time to lay firm governmental foundations f o r administration. The religious thoughts in the Koran, moreover, were in embryo only, and were to attain their development

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through the wide sphere which was now opening before them. It was the events through which Islam came into contact with other spheres of thought that first awoke in the breasts of its more thoughtful followers real speculation on religious problems,—speculation hitherto dormant in the Arab. Moreover, the religious laws and ordinances pertaining to practical life, and the forms of legal ritual, were scanty and indefinite. The unfolding of the world of Moslem thought as well as the definite directions given to the various forms of its manifestations and the establishment of its institutions, are all the result of the work of following generations. Nor is this result brought about without inward conflicts and without adjustments. How wrong it would be under these circumstances to assume, as is often asserted at present, that Islam "enters the world as a rounded system." 1 On the contrary, the Islam of Mohammed and of the Koran is immature and needs for its completion the activity of the coming generations. We wish first to consider only a few requirements of the external life. The most immediate needs were provided for by Mohammed and his helpers. We may credit the tradition which tells us that Mohammed himself established a graded tariff for the impost taxes. 2 The conditions of his own time make it imperative to raise the zakat from the primitive level of communistic alms to a regulated governmental tax of an obligatory amount. After his death such regulations were, by sheer necessity, forced more and more into prominence. The soldiers scattered through distant provinces, especially those who did not come from the religious circle of Medina, had not gotten their bearings as to the mode of religious practices. And first now for the political demands. The continuous wars and the extensive conquests

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demanded the establishment of military standards as well as further laws for the conquered peoples. These laws had to deal with the legal status of the subjects and with the economic problems arising from new conditions. It was especially the energetic caliph, 'Omar, the actual founder of the Moslem state, whose great conquests in Syria, including Palestine and Egypt, brought about the first definite regulation of political and economic questions. II. The details of these regulations cannot interest us here, since for our purposes the general knowledge of the fact is alone of importance, namely that the legal development of Islam began immediately after the prophet's death and kept pace with its need. One of these details I must nevertheless take up, on account of its importance for an understanding of the character of this early period. It is not to be denied that the oldest demands laid upon the conquering Moslems face to face with the conquered unbelievers (in this first phase of Moslem legal development), were penetrated with the spirit of toleration. 1 Whatever semblance of religious tolerance yet remains in Moslem states, and such semblances have been frequently verified by eighteenth century travelers, goes back to the first half of the seventh century with its outspoken principle of freedom in religious practices granted to monotheists of another faith. The tolerant attitude of ancient Islam drew its authority from the Koran (2, v. 257). " T h e r e is no compulsion in belief." 2 Even in later times in a few cases people fell back on this to ward off from those heretics who had been forced to embrace Islam the severe penal consequences generally the lot of apostates. 3 The accounts of the first Moslem decade offer many an example of the religious tolerance of the first caliphs towards followers of the ancient religions. The direc-

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tions given to the leaders of conquering bands are very instructive. As a leading example we have the contract which the prophet made with the Christians of Nejran, guaranteeing 4 the protection of Christian institutions; and also the directions which he gives Mu'ad ibn Jebel for his conduct in Yemen: ' ' No Jew is to be disturbed in his Judaism." 5 The peace treaties conceded to the Byzantine empire crumbling more and more under Islam, were actuated by this lofty spirit 6 though there were certain barriers against the public practice of religious ceremonies (they could practice their religion undisturbed) by the payment of a toleration tax (jizya). On the other hand, it is noteworthy that an historical study of the sources leads to the conclusion 61 that many a restriction, 7 introduced in these old days, did not come into practice until a time more favorable to fanaticism. This, for example, holds true of the decree against the building of new, or the repairing of old, churches. 'Omar I I in his narrow-mindedness, was apparently the first to take such a measure seriously. His example was readily followed by rulers of the stamp of the 'Abbaside Mutawakkil. And the fact that such stern rulers found occasion to attack temples of other faiths erected since the conquest, is in itself proof that there had hitherto been no hindrance to such erections. J u s t as the principle of tolerance ruled in the sphere of religion, so it did in that of every-day life,—in fact the kindly treatment of heretics in civic and economic matters was raised to the level of law. The oppression of non-Moslems (ahl al-dimma) who were under Moslem protection, was condemned as a sin.8 When the governor of the Lebanon province once took very severe action against the inhabitants, who had revolted against the oppression of the tax gatherers, he was incurring the rebuke of the prophet: ' ' He who oppresses a protege and lays heavy burdens upon him, I myself will appear as his

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accuser on the judgment day." 9 Until quite recently there used to be pointed out the site of the " J e w ' s house," in the vicinity of Bostra, about which Porter in his book " F i v e Years in Damascus," tells the following legend. 'Omar had once torn down a mosque standing on this site, because the governor had seized a Jew's house in order to replace it by a mosque.10 III. While, in this constructive period, the first task was to decide the judicial relation of conquering Islam to the subjected nations, still, the inner religious life and its legal regulation could not be ignored in any of its branches. In the case of the soldiers who had already been scattered far and wide, before the religious rites and ceremonies had been definitely fixed, and who in these distant lands formed a religious community, it became necessary to provide a fixed standard for their ritualistic duties with due allowance for necessary modifications. They had also to be provided—and this was especially difficult—with strict regulations dealing with the juridical conditions, till now entirely foreign to the majority of the Arabian conquerors. In Syria, Egypt and Persia, they were forced to compromise with the customs of the country, based on ancient civilizations, and adjust the conflict between inherited laws and those recently acquired. In other words, Moslem legal procedure had to be regulated 011 its religious, as well as its civic side. The Koranic provisions, limited to the primitive conditions holding in Arabia, had not kept pace with the new problems and were entirely insufficient. Its regulations could not provide for the unexpected problems arising from conquests. The worldly-minded functionaries, who, especially during the prime of the Omayyad rule, promoted the external splendor of the new kingdom, manifested little care for such needs. Although they did not entirely neglect religious aspects, still their greatest interests did not lie in

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the development of the legal aspect of a religious organization, but rather in the strengthening of the political organization, and the retaining of that which had been won by the sword as the privilege of the Arabian race. Established custom was used to satisfy the legal demands of the day, and in debatable cases cunning, and I fear, even an arbitrary spirit, was sufficient for the administration of justice. Moreover, they did not follow very closely the rules which had already been enacted by the first pious caliphs. This could not satisfy those pious people who were striving to organize the new life in the sense of a religious law divinely ordained and in accord with the views of the prophet. The injunctions of the prophet were to be applied to all things, both religious and civic, and were to be considered as the standard of practice. The '' companions," that is, that group of people which had lived in the company of the prophet, had seen him act and heard him judge, proved the best source for this information. So long, then, as a "companion" survived, his word could determine the demands of pious usage and the details of divine law. After the passing of this first generation, people had to be contented with the statements which the following generation had received directly from their predecessors concerning the questions prevailing at that time, and so on from generation to generation to the latest times. Any kind of act or judgment was considered proper, if it could be vindicated as coming through a chain of tradition, dating back to a companion of the prophet, who, as an eye-witness had declared it to be in accord with the wish of the prophet. The usages of ritual and of law formed of the authority of such traditions, were sanctified as practiced under, and sanctioned by, the prophet. They were confirmed by the authoritative founders and first adherents

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of Islam. 1 This is Sunna,—sacred custom. The form in which it is stated is Hadlth, tradition. These terms are not identical. The Hadlth is the document of the Sunna. It is through the many credible reports transmitted from generation to generation that this Hadlth declares what the "companions," basing their decisions on the sanction of the prophet, regarded as right in religion and law, and what from this point of view should be the single rule of practice. It is clear therefore that even in Islam the theory of sacred ex-Koranic legislation could be formed, that like the Jews, Islam too could have a ivritten and oral law. 2 Since the Sunna is the sum of the customs and of the conceptions of the oldest Moslem community, 3 it stands as the most authoritative interpretation of the very insufficient teaching of the Koran, and through which the Koran becomes a living and active force. Adequately to estimate the Sunna it is of vital importance to keep in mind the saying which is ascribed to 'All, and which he gave to 'Abdallah ibn 'Abbas as instruction, on his departure to negotiate with the insurgents: ' ' Do not fight them with the Koran, for it can bear different interpretations, and is of varying meanings; fight them with the Sunna; from that there is no escape." 4 This cannot possibly be an authentic utterance of 'All; but it comes, in any case, from ancient times and reflects the ancient Moslem mode of thought. We need not conclude that there is not a grain of truth here and there in the Hadith communications, of later generations, coming, if not directly from the mouth of the prophet, still from the oldest generation of Moslem authority. But on the other hand, one can easily perceive that the great distance from the source both in respect to time and extent brought with it the increasing danger of inventing doctrines, whether of theoretical

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value or for practical purposes, in outwardly correct Hadlth-forms and assigned to the prophet and his "companions" as the highest authority. It soon resulted in the fact, that every opinion, every party, every advocate of any doctrine, gave this form to his proposition; consequently the most contradictory teachings bore the garb of this documentary authentication. In the sphere of ritualism or dogma, in juridical relations, or in political division, there was no school or party doctrine which could not produce a Hadlth or a whole group of Hadiths for their own use, which had the outward appearance of correct tradition. This condition of affairs could not remain hidden from the Mohammedans themselves. Their theologians set in motion an extraordinarily interesting scientific discipline, that of the Hadith-Criticism, so that when the opposing elements could not be harmonized the true traditions could be separated from the apocryphal. Naturally the point of view of their criticism is not ours, and the latter finds a broad field of action, where the Moslem critic believes he is producing indubitable tradition. The final outcome of this critical activity was the recognition in the seventh century of six works, as canonical standards, gathered by theologians of the third century from an almost infinite mass of traditional material and forming the Hadiths which to them seemed credible, and which were elevated by them to the rank of decisive sources of that which should be regarded as the Sunna of the prophet. Among these six Hadith collections there are the first group of Buhharl (d. 256/870) and of Muslim (d. 261/875), the most important sources of prophetic Sunna, designated as " s o u r c e " groups because of the formally incontestable data contained in them. To these were added also as authoritative sources, t h e collections of Abii (d. 303/915), a l Tirmidl

Dawud (d. 2 7 5 / 8 8 8 ) , a l N a s a ' I (d. 2 7 9 / 8 9 2 ) , Ibn Maja (d. 273/

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886), the last to be added in spite of some opposition. Still earlier Malik ibn Anas had codified the customs of Medina, the home of all Sunna; without, however, being guided by the point of view of Hadlth collections. So a new group of written sources of religion arose beside the Koran, which became of the greatest importance in the knowledge and life of Islam. IY. From the point of view of the religious historical development with which we are concerned, it is the process of growth rather than the final literary form of the Hadith which engages our interests. Even the questions of genuineness and age are secondary by the side of the circumstance that the struggles of the Moslem community are faithfully mirrored in the Hadith, and that furnishes inestimable documents for following the ultra Koranic religious aim. For not only have law and custom, religious teachings and political doctrines clothed themselves in Hadithform, but everything in Islam, both that which has worked itself out through its own strength, as well as that which has been appropriated from without. In this work foreign elements have been so assimilated that one has lost sight of their origin. Sentences from the Old and New Testament, rabbinical sayings as well as those from the apocryphal gospels, the teaching of Greek philosophers, sayings of Persian and Indian wisdom, have found room in this garb among the sayings of the prophet of Islam. Even the Lord's prayer is not lacking in well confirmed Hadith-form. In this form more distant intruders have acquired, in a direct or indirect manner, citizenship in Islam. An interesting example is found in the story belonging to the literature of the world,1 of the parable of the lame man who steals the fruit of a tree from the back of a blind man, and the application of this parable to the common responsibility of body and soul. It appears in Islam as Hadith, with a careful train

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of tradition, Abü Bekr ibn ' A y y á s h > A b ü S a ' i d alB a k k a l > ' I k r i m a > i b n 'Abbas. 2 This parable and its use was known also to the rabbis. I n the Talmud it is put in the mouth of Rabbi Yehüdá ha-nási, in order to silence the doubt of the emperor Marcus Aurelius. 3 I t may have entered the Moslem group f r o m this side. I n this way a whole store of religious legends have entered in, so that in looking back on the elements here mentioned as being contained in the traditional material, we can distinguish, both in the Jewish religious literature as well as in the Moslem, between h a l a k h i c (legal) and a g a d i c (homolitical) elements. The eclecticism which stood at the cradle of Islam thus develops into rich results. I t is one of the most attractive problems to investigators, who devote their attention to this p a r t of the religious literature, to seek in the varied materials the widely branching sources, f r o m which they are formed, and to detect the movement of which they are the documents. I n this way has the Hadith formed the framework f o r the oldest development of the religious and ethical thoughts of Islam. The extension of the morality based on the K o r a n finds its expression in the Hadith which became also the subtler medium f o r the ethical emotions to which Islam at the time of its rise and struggle f o r existence was as yet insensible. The Hadith embodies definitions of that higher f o r m of piety which is not satisfied with bare formality and of which we have already given some examples. 1 The Hadith is fond of striking the chords of tenderness—the tenderness of God as well as of men. " G o d created a hundred p a r t s of mercy, of these he kept ninety-nine for himself and gave one to the world. F r o m this flows all the gentleness, which is evinced by m a n . " 4 " I f you hope for mercy f r o m m e , " says God, " t h e n be merciful toward my c r e a t u r e s . " " H e who cares f o r widows and orphans, is as highly 1

See above p. 20.

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honored, as lie who devotes his life to religious war in the way of God; or he who spends the day in fasting and the night in prayer." 5 " H e who strokes the head of an orphan, receives for each hair which his hand touches, a light on the day of resurrection." " E a c h thing has its key; the key to paradise is love for the small and poor.'' And in the Hadith we find teachings of this kind directed to single comrades of the prophet, in which Mohammed recommends the duty of ethical and human virtues as the true essence of religion. None of these numerous teachings seems to me worthier of mention than that of Abu Darr, a former dissolute "companion" of the tribe of Ghifar, who turned to Islam and at the time of the first revolution was one of the most conspicuous figures of the party. He recounts: " M y friend (the prophet) has given me a sevenfold admonition: 1. Love the poor and be near unto them. 2. Look always at those who are beneath thee, and do not look up to those who are above thee. 3. Never request anything from anyone. 4. B e faithful to your relatives, even when they anger you. 5. Speak always the truth, even when it is bitter. 6. Do not let thyself be frightened from the path of God by the taunts of the revilers. 7. Proclaim often: 'There is no power nor strength except through Allah, for this is from the treasure which is hidden under the throne of God.' ' ' 8 The serious nature of religious formalism itself is heightened through claims which are first of all made in the Hadith. The value of the work (as we have already mentioned above, p. 17) is estimated according to the sentiment which its practice arouses. This is one of the chief fundamentals of Moslem religious life. The importance attributed to it is evident in the fact that a motto inculcating this has been inscribed over one of the chief entrances to the mosque of Al-Azhar in Cairo, the much frequented centre of Moslem theological learning, to serve as an exhortation to those entering, who are here

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engaged in either learning or meditation: " D e e d s will be judged according to intentions, and each man will be rewarded according to the measure of his intentions." This is a sentence f r o m the Hadith, which has become the guiding thought of all religious deeds in Islam. ' ' God speaks: Approach me with your intentions, not with your deeds." 7 This Hadith, although of later origin, has grown- from the conviction of the believer, and characterizes his estimate of religious values. The moral effect of the content of dogmatic teaching is heightened by the development in the Hadith. A single example, though of the utmost importance f o r the estimate of Moslem religious thought, will suffice. I n the sense of Koranic monotheism shirk, "associat i o n , " is the greatest sin, which God will not forgive (Sura 31, v. 12; 4, v. 116). I n the development of this earliest dogmatic conception, as it is given in the Hadith, not only the outward veiling of the belief in the unity of God, but also every kind of worship which is not an end in itself is branded as shirk. A number of moral defects have also been included in this category. Hypocritical religious exercises, which are practiced in order to win the approval or the admiration of men, are classed as shirk, f o r the consideration of man is therein mingled with the thought of God.8 Hypocrisy cannot be reconciled with true monotheism. Even pride is a kind of shirk. Thus the ethics of Islam have been able to f o r m the category of " s m a l l " or " h i d d e n " shirk (lying in the depths of the soul). The aims also of the religious life are given a higher plane than in primitive Islam. We encounter utterances which harmonize with the mysticism of a later date. The following revelation of God to Mohammed is found, in a Hadith sanctioned by one of the best authorities and so generally accepted as to be included in the compendium of the forty-two most important sayings: " M y servant

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comes constantly nearer to me through voluntary pious works, until I love him; and when I love him, I am his eye, his ear, his tongue, his foot, his hand; through me he sees, through me he hears, through me he speaks, through me he moves and feels." 9 The legal decisions drawn up in traditional form, and also the ethical and constructive sayings and teachings, have claimed for the group in which they have arisen, the authority of the prophet. They also, by means of an unbroken chain of tradition, trace their connection back to the "companion," who had heard the saying or rule from the prophet himself, or had seen certain customs practiced by him. It did not require any great ingenuity on the part of Moslem critics to question the truth of a great part of this material. This suspicion was due to the anachronisms 10 and other questionable features of many of the statements and to the contradictions manifest in them. Besides, the names of those men are explicitly mentioned who with a certain aim in mind invented and circulated Hadiths as an aid to these aims. And many a pious man toward the close of his life frankly confessed what great contribution the Hadith fiction owed to him. Little harm was seen in this if the fiction served a good end. An otherwise quite honorable man could be stamped as a suspicious medium of tradition, without having his civic or religious reputation injured. On the one hand, people read that in the name of the prophet the pit of hell was prepared for those who falsely ascribed utterances to him, and on the other hand, they justified themselves by sentences in which the prophet is supposed to have anticipated such fictitious utterances from the first as his spiritual right. " A f t e r my death the speeches ascribed to me will increase, just as many speeches have been ascribed to earlier prophets (which in reality they never uttered). That which is ascribed to me as my utterance must be

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compared with the book of God; that which is in harmony with it comes from me, whether I have truly said it or not." Further on: " T h a t which is well spoken I have said myself." The inventors of tradition, as is evident, boldly show their cards. "Mohammed has said it," means here only " i t is right, incontestable from the religious point of view, indeed desirable, and the prophet himself would have sanctioned it with his approval." We are all reminded of the Talmudic utterances of R. Josua b. Levi that anything which a keen witted pupil might teach up to the latest period was as if revealed to Moses himself on Sinai.11 Y. The Pia fraus of the inventors of tradition was met with forbearance on all sides, when it was a question of ethical and devotional Hadiths. Stricter theologians, however, assumed a more serious attitude, when ritualistic practices or legal judgments were to be founded on such Hadiths; the more so, when the advocates advanced different points of view and different Hadiths. This was not to be the exclusive basis on which the decision as to religious ritual and practice, and as to law and justice, was to be founded. This consideration has contributed much in arousing a tendency to be found at the very beginning of the development of law, to make use of deductive methods in deciding the religious standards by the side of authentic tradition. The representatives of this tendency also thought they could best regulate the new relations in their formative thought, by the use of analogies and arguments, or even on the basis of subjective judgments. The Hadlth was not discarded when it was thought to afford a safe basis but free speculative treatment was allowed, even encouraged as a legitimate method of legal reasoning. It is not surprising that the influences of foreign culture have had their share in the formation of this legal

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method and the peculiarities of its use. Even Islamic jurisprudence bears, for example, in its methods as well as in its detailed enactments special undeniable traces of the influence of Eoman law. This legal activity, which had already reached its efflorescence in the second century of the Mohammedan era, brought a new element to Moslem moral culture: that is the knowledge of ftkh, of religious law, which in its caustic corruption was soon to prove disastrous for the trend of religious life and science. The political changes played an important part in its development, for they led the public spirit of Islam into new paths, marked by the fall of the Omayyad dynasty and the rise of the ' Abbasides. In earlier discussions I have had the opportunity of considering the motives which predominated in the administration of both these dynasties. Elsewhere I have pointed out the influences calling forth those theocratic changes, which, aside from the question of dynasty, give to the 'Abbaside epoch its definite character, as contrasted with that of its predecessor. Here, therefore, I wish only to indicate briefly that the ruin which the 'Abbasides brought upon the caliphate, marks, not merely a political revolution, a change in dynasty, but also a profound upheaval in respect to religion. In place of the government of the Omayyads, who had guarded the traditions and ideals of ancient Arabia at Damascus and in their desert castles, and were accused of worldliness by the pietist group, we find now a theocratic government, imbued with the principles of church politics. While on the one hand the 'Abbasides base their right to the government on the fact that they are descendants of the prophet's family, on the other they also claim to establish on the ruins of a government condemned by the pious as godless, a rule in accord with the Sunna of the prophet and the demands of given religion. 1 They zeal-

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ously endeavored to maintain and cultivate this appearance on which their claims are founded. Thus they do not wish to be mere kings, but primarily princes of the Church, to consider their caliphate as a Church state in the government of which, as contrasted with the standpoint of the Omayyads, divine law was to be the only standard. I n contrast to the Omayyads, they endeavor while exploiting their claims of legitimacy, to apparently meet the demands involved in this claim. They fairly overflow with unctious piety in the endeavor to restore the sanctity of prophetical recollections. Their insignia, indeed, is assumed to be a prophet's mantle. They ostentatiously indulge in pious talk. They wish, in this way to emphasize the contrast between themselves and their predecessors. The Omayyads had refrained f r o m hypocritical cant. Even though, as we shall see later, they were actuated by Moslem orthodox belief, they did not hypocritically emphasize the religious aspect of their office. Among the rulers of this dynasty, it is f r o m 'Omar I I alone, a prince brought up in the company of pious men at Medina, whose blindness to political claims contributed to the fall of his house, that we can find the denial of the right of a government to exist f o r the administration of purely worldly affairs in the state. F o r example, he was considered capable of giving the advice to his viceroy in Emessa, when the latter informed him that the city had been laid waste and a certain outlay was necessary f o r its reconstruction: " S t r e n g t h e n it with justice and cleanse its streets of injustice." 2 This does not sound like the Omayyads. With the 'Abbasides, who indeed, in increasing measure surrounded themselves with all the splendor and outward pomp of the Persian Sassanian kings, pious phrases are the order of the day. The Persian ideal of a government in which religion and government are closely united, 3 is the evident plan of the 'Abbaside rulers.

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Eeligion is now not simply a matter of interest to the state, but its central business. One can easily imagine how greatly the reputation of the theologians was increased both at court and in the state. I n as much as the state, law, and justice were to become regulated and develop according to religion, it was necessary to show especial favor to those who guarded the Sunna and its learning, or who disclosed divine law according to scientific methods. With the rise of the new dynasty the time had come in which the legal development of Islam was to rise f r o m former meagre and modest beginnings. To hold the Hadlths of the prophet in high esteem, to hunt them down and to transmit them, was no longer simply a pious exercise in theory, but a matter of highly practical importance. I t was necessary, therefore, that the sacred law should be presented with the greatest care, because both the rules of ritual and of the state, as well as the administration of justice in all its departments, even in the simplest civic regulations, were to be in accord with the divine law. The time f o r the development of law and its establishment had come, the time of filth and of those learned in the law, the fukaha. The K a d i is the great man. Not only in Medina, the actual birth-place of Islam and the native town of the Sunna, where a piety which strove against worldly command had cherished even till now the spirit of the sacred law, but also in the new centres of the kingdom, in Mesopotamia, in the furthermost p a r t s of the state, both east and west, the study of the science of law expands more and more under the shadow of the theocratic caliphate. The Hadiths are transmitted hither and thither, new propositions and decisions are derived f r o m this material. The results do not always agree; differences appear even in the points of view and methods. Some accord the Hadlth the highest authority

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and in those cases where contradictory Hadiths give different answers to the same question, one had to decide f o r the supremacy of one or the other. Others, however, considering the untrustworthy nature of the Hadith proof, were not much embarrassed by that which was positive. They desired freedom in their conclusions. F i r m l y established local usages and legal customs could not be simply set aside. The grades between these opposite tendencies gave rise to parties and schools, who differed not only in the details of the decisions, but also in questions of method. T h e y are called Madahib (sing. madhab) which means Tendencies or Rites but not sects. F r o m the v e r y beginning the champions of these diff e r i n g claims cherished the absolute conviction that standing on the same ground, and on a basis of equality, they served the same cause; they therefore treated each other w^ith proper consideration. 4 Seldom is a harsh judgment uttered by over-zealous followers of the differing schools. It is only with the increase of the overweening self-glorification of the F u k a h a that signs of fanatical Madhab opinions appear. Serious theologians have consistently condemned such one-sidedness. 5 On the other hand mutual tolerance characterized the Hadith formula ascribed to the prophet: " T h e differences of opinion in my community is (a sign of divine) m e r c y . " There are in fact indications that this principle presents a basis of adjustment of the attacks to which the diversity of form, and uncertainty of the legal usage in Islam, are exposed f r o m both internal and external adversaries. 8 E v e n up till the present day the view prevails that the variations in custom of the different schools should be equally recognized as orthodox, so long as they claim as authority the teaching and practice of witnesses, who have been recognized by the consensus of opinion as authoritative teachers (Imam). W e will come back to this later on. The step of changing f r o m one Madhab

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to the other, which could easily be taken from, matured expediency, causes no change in the religious status, and is accompanied by no formalities. Mohammed ibn Khalaf (d. about 1135), a theologian of the fifth century of the Mohammedan era, won the nickname of Hanfash because he went over in succession to three different schools. He was first a Hanbalite, then he joined the followers of Abu Hanifa, and later went over to the Shafi'i. In his nickname the names of the Imams of these groups are phonetically combined.7 Various members of the same family, father and son, may belong to the different Madahib. In fairly recent times even, we find it noted that a pious man in Damascus prayed God to give him four sons, so that each one could belong to one of the four Madahib. Our authority adds that this prayer was granted. s It is not unusual to find in the biographies of famous theologians the constantly recurring trait that they gave their decisions simultaneously on the basis of two outwardly different schools.9 This presented nothing fundamentally absurd. Of the various schools with their petty rituals and legal variations, four are still in existence, which constitute the divisions of the great Mohammedan world. Personal considerations wTere at first determining factors in leading to the predominance of the one or the other school in particular districts of the Islamic world, through the disciples of a particular school obtaining recognition in a certain territory and founding schools therein. It is by such means that the school of the Imam al-Shafi'i (d. 204/820) obtained footing in some parts of Egypt, in East Africa, as well as in South Arabia, and from there extended to the Indian archipelago. Other parts of Egypt, however, all North Africa, as well as Spain in former times, and latterly also German and English "West Africa adopted the teaching of the great Imam of Medina, Malik ibn Anas (d. 179/795). On the

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other hand Turkish provinces, the Western as well as the Central Asiatic, like the Mohammedans of the Indian mainland, adopted the teachings of Abu Hanlfa (d. about 150/767), the same Imam who was regarded as the founder and first codifier of the speculative law school. Comparatively the least extended at the present time is the school of the Imam Ahmed ibn Hanbal (d. 241/ 855). It represents the extreme wing of the fanatical Sunna cult. Formerly, up to the fifteenth century, it dominated Mesopotamia, Syria and Palestine. Within the territory of the Ottomans as they rose to the leading position of the Moslem world, the intolerant Hanbalite teachings constantly lost ground, while the influence of the Hanifite system spread.10 We will, however, have opportunity in the course of these lectures to speak of a renaissance of the Hanbalite movement in the eighteenth century. The Mohammedans of the Philippines belonging to the United States, follow the Shafi'ite ritual. VI. It is now time to consider a great fundamental dogma which is more characteristic than any other of the legal development of Islam; it forms at the same time a mediating element within the divisions arising from the independent development of the schools. Despite the theoretical uncertainty of usage in the theological circles of Islam the fundamental principle was established and consistently maintained among Moslem theologians, and with varying application, which was expressed in the utterance ascribed to the prophet, " M y community will never agree in an error (dalála)," or as grouped in a later form, "Allah has afforded you protection from three things: do not curse your prophet, lest you be entirely destroyed; never amongst you will the people of falsehood gain the victory over the people of truth; and you will never agree in a heretical teaching.' n

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Herein is declared the infallibility of the "consensus ecclesiae." 2 This fundamental principle of Moslem orthodoxy is expressed by the Arabic t e r m ijma, (agreement). I n the course of our presentation we will often meet with its use. I t gives the key to the understanding of the history of the development of Islam in its civic, dogmatic, and legal relations. T h a t which is decreed by the whole Moslem community to be true and correct must also be regarded as t r u e and correct. F o r s a k i n g the I j m a separates one f r o m the orthodox Church. T h a t this principle first appeared in the course of the development of Islam shows that it could not easily be deduced f r o m the K o r a n . A school anecdote recounts t h a t the g r e a t Al-Shafi'i who regarded the principle of the consensus as one of the most authoritative criteria in the establishment of law, when asked f o r a confirmation of it f r o m the K o r a n , had to beg f o r a period of three days in which to consider. A t the expiration of this time, he appeared before his hearers, sick and weak, with swollen hands and feet and bloated face,—so great an effort had he been forced to make, in order to point out the verse, S u r a 4, v. 115, as a support of the doctrine of " c o n s e n s u s . " " B u t whoso shall sever himself f r o m the prophet a f t e r t h a t ' t h e guidance' hath been manifested to him, and shall follow any other p a t h than that of the faithful, we will t u r n our back on him as he h a t h turned his back on us, and we will cast him into Hell;—an evil journey thither." 3 On the other hand he could f u r n i s h many supports f r o m Hadith-utterances, which were accepted as teachings of the prophet. 4 E v e r y t h i n g then which is sanctioned by the consensus of sentiment of the followers of Islam is right, and lays claim to obligatory recognition; and it is regarded as right only because of this general sentiment of the consensus. Only those interpretations and variations of the Koranic text and of the Sunna are right which, the

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consensus lias endorsed. In this sense it possesses the actual "autoritas interpretativa." Only those dogmatic formulae are in accordance with religion, in which, often after violent discussions, the consensus finally acquiesces. Those forms of divine worship and of law which the consensus ratifies, are exempt from all theoretical criticism. Only those men and writings are accepted as authorities who have recognized the common consciousness of the community, expressed not only by synods and councils, but through an almost instinctive " v o x populi," which in its collective capacity is not liable to error. We shall later on have occasion to see the application of this principle as the criterion of orthodoxy, and to demonstrate how the universal recognition of certain religious phenomena, which from the theoretical standpoint would be condemned as hostile to Islam, but nevertheless could be stamped with the mark of orthodoxy, can be explained by the predominating position acquired by this principle in Islam. The phenomena were justified by the ijma and therefore, notwithstanding the theological objections which stood in their way, they were ultimately accepted, and even at times recognized as obligatory. The extent of this ijma was at first confined more to the general feeling than to a definite theological definition. In vain has the attempt been made to limit it in time and place and to define as ijma that which could be proved as the consensus of opinion of Mohammed's 5 "companions" or of the old authorities of Medina. Such a limitation could not suffice for the later development. On the other hand, however, to abandon completely the ijma to the instinctive feeling of the masses could not be satisfactory to a theological discipline. A satisfactory formula was evolved defining ijma as the unanimous judgment and teaching of the recognized religious teachers of Islam at a specified time. They were

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the people of the "binding and loosing," the men who were called to formulate and announce the law and the dogma, and to decide on the correctness of its application. I t will have become apparent that the germ of freedom of action and the possibility of development in Islam is contained in this principle. I t offers a desirable corrective of the tyranny of dead letters and of personal authority. I t has proved itself, in the p a s t at least, a leading factor in the adaptability of Islam. W h a t could its consistent adaptation accomplish f o r the f u t u r e ? VII. With this principle of agreement in mind let us now take a survey of the dissensions occurring within the legal development. I t is mostly in minor details that the above-mentioned rituals differ f r o m each other, and one can understand that these differences did not give rise to the divisions into sects. Many formal differences are apparent in the f o r m of the prayer rituals: for example, as to whether one should repeat certain formulas aloud or silently; as to how high above the shoulder the outspread hands should be raised in the beginning of a prayer, at the introductory phrase, "Allahu A k b a r " (God is g r e a t ) ; as to whether the hands should be dropped during the prayer (so the rite of Malik), or crossed, and in this case whether above or below the navel. There are also differences in some detailed formalities of genuflections and prostrations. The disputes over the question as to whether a prayer is acceptable if a woman is beside the one praying, or if in the very midst of the line of worshippers, is very interesting. On this matter the school of Abu H a n i f a takes a decided anti-feminine position, as opposed to the others. Among such details a special question under dispute has always impressed me, because in its religious aspect it appears to be of far-reaching significance.

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The ritual language of Islam is Arabic. All religious formulas are repeated in the language of the Koran. If now, someone is not conversant with Arabic may he say the Fatiha,—the prayer forming the first sura of the Koran and designated as the " L o r d ' s P r a y e r " of Islam, in his mother tongue? Only the school of Abu Hanifa, which was itself of Persian origin, is decided in the permission of the use of the non-Arabic tongue in the performance of this devotional formula. Their opponents have therefore blamed them for a tendency toward Magism. In other matters of the ritual, differences sometimes appear which are linked with considerations of a fundamental nature. To these belong such things as the question of substitution for fasting or the breaking of a fast. While Abu Hanlfa is lenient toward unintentional violation of the law of fasting, Malik and Ibn Hanbal insist that the fasting on the day in question becomes invalid through the unwitting violation of the strict regulation, and demand the substitution required in the law. They demand the same substitution for omission to fast, prompted by unavoidable considerations of health. Furthermore when a renegade repentantly returns to Islam, he must make up for all the fast days which have passed during his apostasy, by complementary fasts on ordinary days. Abu Hanlfa and Shafi'i ignore such an arithmetical view of the law of fasting. The treatment of the dietary regulations in the old traditions afford considerable opportunity for many differences in this branch of the law. First of all the subjective test which the Koran stipulates concerning animal food gives occasion for differences of opinion. The most remarkable, indeed, is the difference in regard to horsemeat which is allowed in one madahib and forbidden in others. 1 In many cases, it is true, these differences of opinion are merely of a casuistic nature, 2 since they

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often refer to animals which would actually never be used as food. 3 To give at least one example in this field I would mention that Malik, in opposition to the other schools, did not consider the use of wild animals for food as forbidden. The difference, indeed, is practically eliminated even for him, since he stamps as makruh (deprecated) those animals which he has taken out of the category of haram (forbidden). Attention should be called to the fact that in this instance, a great p a r t of the ground of dispute depends upon the various conceptions as to the degree of acceptance or rejection, or as to whether certain actions or restrictions are obligatory or only desirable. 4 Nevertheless life, within the meaning of the law, is not exhausted in ritualistic practices. Islamic sacred law includes indeed all branches of the administration of justice,—civic, criminal and political. No single chapter of the code could escape regulation by sacred law. All actions of public and private life are subject to religious ethics, by which the theological jurists thought to harmonize the whole life of a Moslem, with religious demands. There is hardly a chapter in jurisprudence which does not include the difference of opinion of the various orthodox schools. And it is not always questions of secondary importance, but sometimes matters deeply affecting family life. To mention only one: concerning the extent of the authority of the legal agent (wall) as to the bride's portion in a marriage contract. The various schools disagree concerning cases in which the wall may assert a right of protest against a marriage about to be performed, or concerning the question, as to how f a r the intervention of a wall is essential to the validity of a marriage. The unique position held by Abu Hanlfa and a few other leaders, regarding an important question of juridical procedure much discussed in older times, comes

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under these legal difficulties. They combat the usage, founded on numerous traditions, according to which in pecuniary affairs, in default of regular witnesses according to the rules for the ratification of a claim, the place of one may be supplied by the plaintiff under oath. Adhering to the strict sense of the Koran command (Sura 2, v. 282) they demand the witness of two men, or of one man and two women, on behalf of the claim upon which devolves the onus probandi. They do not accept the substitution of other means of proof for the evidence of a witness. 5 The investigation of the numerous variations in Moslem law, as well as that of the arguments advanced by the champions of the opposing opinions and practices, besides the criticism of these arguments from the point of view of each school, forms an important branch of juridical theology in Islam. It has also constantly offered an opportunity for the manifestation of scientific acumen, in a field which is of the greatest religious interest to current Islam. An extensive literature has arisen from of old in the scientific study of law, in connection with the significance laid upon this sphere of investigation. 6 VIII. The prevailing trend of this legal scientific development is of greater interest than the details of the differences within the schools of law. In this connection it is to be presumed that those who desire to understand Islam, will be interested in the question of hermeneutics. In religions whose forms of confession and practice are founded on definite sacred texts, the legal as well as the dogmatic development comes under consideration in the exegesis of the sacred text. In such cases the religious history is also a history of exegesis. And this is true of Islam in a very marked sense, for its internal history is mirrored in the methods adopted for the explanation of the sacred texts.

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To characterize the general tendency of the legal scientific efforts we may instance the following circumstance. It was not the aim of the purists to make life bitter for the Moslems by erecting a wall of legal restrictions. From the beginning they laid importance on the following Koranic injunction (Sura 22, v. 77); "Allah hath not laid on you any hardship in religion," and (Sura 2, v. 181): "Allah wisheth you ease, and wisheth you not discomfort," principles which are variously expressed in the Hadith: " T h i s religion is easy," i. e., free from uncomfortable difficulties. "Liberal Hanifism is most pleasing to God in religion." 1 " W e have come to make it easier, not more difficult." 2 " H e who forbids that which is allowed, is as much to blame as he who interprets that which is forbidden, as allowed," 3 is given by 'Abdallah ibn Mas'ud (d. 32/635), one of the authorities belonging to the old Moslem generations, as a leading thought for the development of the law. 3 The expounders of law have not been faithful to this principle. Sufyan-al-Thauri (d. 161/798), a man of the highest standing among them, says: " It is the part of science to found a permission on the authority of a trustworthy witness. Anyone can easily justify restrictions." 4 The more reasonable teachers allowed themselves, even in later times, to be guided by such principles. The following principle from the laws concerning food is characteristic, " I f there are doubts as to whether a thing is to be considered permitted or forbidden, the preference is to be given on the side of permission, for that is the root," i. e., in themselves all things are permissible; prohibition is accessory, in case of doubt one should go back to the original basis. 5 From this point of view they exercise all their ingenuity to find a way out of the burdensome situation which the wording of Koranic law sometimes lays upon the believers. Many a difficulty could be interpreted away

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or alleviated by liberal exegesis of the text. The obligatory character of a command or prohibition was easily nullified by hermeneutic rules. The imperative or prohibitive form of speech serves for the expression of the desirable 8 or meritorious. The omission or commission of an act, ordered or forbidden by such a form of speech is, therefore, not a serious transgression, and does not incur punishment. A leading teacher of Moslem law of the first century, Ibrahim al-Nacha'l (d. 96/714-15) followed the principle, of never defining anything as absolutely commanded or forbidden, but going only up to the point of maintaining: this has been disapproved of by the companions, that has been recommended. 7 A teacher of the following generation,' Abdallah ibn Shubruma (d. 144/761-2) would give a definite opinion only on that which was permitted (halal). He felt there was no way to decide what (beyond that qualified as such in trustworthy tradition) was definitely forbidden (haram). 8 Many more examples could be given of the predominance of this legal scientific view. The Koran says (Sura 6, v. 121): " D o not eat of that on which Allah's name has not been invoked for that is sin." He who looks at or considers this law from the point of objective exegesis will find here only a strict prohibition of the flesh of an animal which has not been ritualistically blessed at its slaughter." 0 The whole context of this legal utterance "invoking A l l a h " indicates a definite ritualistic act, and not an inward thought of God and his kindnesses. " E a t , " so runs the injunction, " t h a t over which the name of God has been pronounced . . . why do you not eat that over which the name of God has been pronounced. He has indeed specifically set forth that which he has forbidden you to e a t . " In this way those are admonished who, on ascetic grounds or because they clung to the superstitious uses of paganism—for even

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paganism had some food restrictions—practiced abstinences which Mohammed declared obsolete, and annulled. But he insisted on the essential condition that the partaking of animal food freely permitted, should be preceded by the naming of the name of Allah. 10 This is probably borrowed from the Jewish custom of requiring berakha (blessing), before slaughtering and before eating. Mohammed stamps the omission of this as " f i s k , " sin. The unmistakable character of the custom prescribed by Mohammed is thereby definitely strengthened. That which had not been blessed in this manner should not be used as food. The strict interpreters of the law,—of the four schools especially that of Abu Hanifa,—apply this to the theoretical exegesis, and to the daily practices of life. Moreover, those Moslems who emphasize strictness in legal acts, consider it essential to this very day. Even in the chase (Sura 5, v. 6) the mention of the name of Allah must precede the sending forth of the falcon or the hunting dogs. Under these conditions only can the hunted animal be used as food. 11 The experiences of daily life soon made clear the difficulties of strict conformity to such a law. How was a Moslem to convince himself that the command was really carried out? In most of the schools the interpreters of the law very soon discovered that the prohibitive grammatical form in which the text was expressed was not to be taken literally; it was intended merely to express a wish whose fulfilment is desirable, but is not to be taken in a strictly obligatory sense, and therefore did not involve the consequences of an indispensable law.12 If compliance with the law, or rather the wish, fails through oversight or other hindrance, this failure would not militate against the allowance of such flesh as food. In this way by a gradual leniency the principle was finally reached, viz., " W h e n an animal is slaughtered by a Moslem, whatever the conditions, the food becomes allowable whether

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or not the name of God is pronounced (at the slaught e r ) . " For " t h e Moslem always has God in his mind whether he declares it in speech or n o t . " And when this conviction had once been reached, it was not difficult to devise some traditional verification by which such a principle could be sanctioned as Si Hadïth, traceable to the prophet. Under such circumstances they had the grammar indeed on their side. As a matter of fact the omission in the content of every speech appearing, in the imperative form, could not be stamped as a great sin. In Sura 4, v. 3, it is said for example, " T h e n marry whoever pleases you from among the women." From this,—so argue the theologians,—it cannot be deduced that one must m a r r y ; but rather that one may marry if one will. But it must not be denied, that in fact, among many sagacious interpreters of the revealed word of God, those are not lacking who have deduced from the imperative form that it is the duty of every Moslem to marry, and that this is a prohibition of celibacy. " M a r r y , " that means " y o u must m a r r y , " not merely, ' ' you may marry. ' ' IX. The most marked example of the liberty advocated by the schools of interpretation in opposition to the restrictive attachment to word of the law is their attitude toward a law which is generally reckoned among those which stamped Moslem practical life,—the prohibition of wine drinking. The drinking of wine is stigmatized in the Koran as an "abomination." 1 But it is known how much opposition was presented to this divine prohibition in the earliest days of Islam, by a community which did not wish to barter Arabian freedom for legal restrictions. 111 We wish simply to allude to the fact that the Moslem poetry of wine 2 as well as the rôle which intemperance and drunkenness played in the diversions of the caliphs,—•

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they were religions princes,—and of those in high positions in the kingdom, hardly portrays a society whose religious law stamps this indulgence as " t h e mother of all offensive things." All this can come under the head of libertinism, and be regarded as a frivolous violation of a religious law otherwise considered valid. Certain antinomian tendencies very soon make themselves felt in this connection. Even some of the prophet's companions in Syria, among whom Abu Jandal is the most noted, would not allow themselves to be misled in the use of wine by the Koran, and justified their excess by the Koran verse (Sura 5, v. 94): " F o r those who believe, and practice good works, there is no sin in what they enjoy, as long as they trust in God and practice good works." 3 It is true that they were severely censured for this exegetical freedom by the strict caliph ' Omar. Of an essentially different order is the fact that the theologians of the East used their ingenuity to limit by interpretation, the extent of the prohibition of other strong drinks, which a stricter interpretation had later included in the law concerning wine. On the one hand the attempt is made to justify the conclusion that, with the exception of wine, it is not the drink itself but only intoxication that is forbidden. 4 Traditions are invented in favor of this, among which there is one which gives the words of the prophet in the name of Ayesha. 5 " Y o u may drink, but do not become intoxicated." Under the protection of such documents, even pious people have not limited themselves to pure water. On the other hand every effort has been made by the strict to prove that " a drink, which when taken in quantity, results in intoxication is forbidden even in the smallest measure." There was also a widespread school of theologians which, clinging to the letter, held only wine (khamr) as forbidden, that is, grapewine. Other fermented drinks are

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only sharab (a drink) or nabid, 6 not " w i n e . " In this way they could issue a license for apple and date wine, etc., and open a wide door to the faithful, through which,—naturally granting that this indulgence did not go so far as intoxication,—many a concession was made to " t h i r s t " in a lexicographical process. 7 Even such a pious caliph as ' Omar I I is said,—according to one statement, 8 —to have declared the nabid as permissible. An 'Abbaside caliph who did not wish to clash with the law, urgently questioned his Kadi as to his views of the nabid. 9 And since such drinks could not be dispensed with at social functions, the treatment of the question of wine which was opened by the lawyers was also interesting to polite society, especially because it was often linked with philological and aesthetic subjects. In the aesthetic circles which the caliph al-Mu'tasim held at his court, one of the pet themes of discussion of the flower of the higher society gathered there, was to consider the synonyms of wine in classic Arabic, as well as the relation of the prohibition of wine to these synonyms. 10 We will probably not go astray in the assumption that it was not the rigorous conception of this relation which was preeminent in the debates of the bel-esprits of Bagdad. Opinions were put forward which gave the most radical opposition to religious restrictions, and even went so far as to ridicule the pious who accepted them. A poem is ascribed to Du-l-rumma in which the latter are alluded to as "thieves, who are called readers of the K o r a n . " 1 1 Or the saying of another poet: " W h o can forbid rain water when grape water is mixed with it? In truth the difficulties which legal interpreters lay upon us are repugnant to me, and I like the opinion of Ibn Mas'ud. " 1 2 The subtlety of the Kufi theologians, already in the second century, furnished the basis of Ibn Mas'ud's theory. Even if " g r a p e w a t e r " could not be granted,

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nevertheless various legal subterfuges were provided, which were made use of even by well intentioned men. 13 It is not unusual to read in the biographies, statements like the following: ' ' WakI' ibn al- J a r rah, one of the most famous Irak theologians, who is famous for his ascetic habits (d. 197/813), persisted in drinking the nabid of the K u f i s " ignoring the fact that this drink was actually wine.14 Khalaf ibn Hisham, a famous Koran reader in K u f a (d. 229/844) drank sharab " d r i n k " (one does not call the devil by his real name) " o n the ground of interpretation"; his biographer indeed, adds that towards the end of his life this Khalaf repeated all the prayers which he had performed during the forty years in which he did not deny himself wine; the prayers of a wine-drinker were invalid and ought to be replaced. 15 When Sharik, Kadi of K u f a in the time of the caliph Mahdl, recited the sayings of Mohammed to the people eager for tradition, the odor of nabid was apparent in his breath. 16 Taking an example from later times, which concerns a famous religious preacher of the sixth century of the Mohammedan E r a : Abu Mansur Kutb al-dm al-amir, who was sent by the caliph alMuktafi as ambassador to the Seljuk Sultan Songor ibn Melikshah. This pious man who, after his death, enjoyed the distinction of being buried near the pious ascetic al-Juneid, composed a treatise on the lawfulness of drinking wine.17 Naturally the zeal of the more conservative element was aroused against such tendencies and phenomena within the legal group. They, " i n contrast to the liberty deduced from an erroneous interpretation of the S u n n a " by many, adhered firmly all their lives to drinking only "water, milk and honey." 1 8 As in the case of all liberal tendencies appearing in the historical course of Islam, they knew how to bring forward a word of

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the prophet condemning the mitigation here described. " M y community," thus runs the Hadith they quote, "will one day drink wine, they will call it by a disguised name and their princes will support them in this." 1 9 Such people are threatened with being turned into apes and swine by God, as happened to the religious sinners of earlier nations. 20 At all events, the method adopted by the widely-recognized Küfic theological school, indicates that as legal subtlety was more and more applied to the deduction of religious law, many an alleviation was suggested, by means of which the severity of the text could be mitigated. A great p a r t of the "contrasted teachings" of the ritualistic schools, into which the Mohammedan world is divided, consists in the disputes over the admissibility of such hermeneutic a r t s and the measure and variations of their practice. I t will be sufficient here to establish the fact f r o m the point of view of Islamic history, that the overwhelming majority of those schools has in many cases brought into vogue the f r e e use of such hermeneutical methods. The aim of all this was to harmonize life, f r o m the point of view of the law, with the actual conditions of social position; to adapt the narrow law of Mecca and Medina to the broader conditions, since, through the conquests of foreign lands, and, through the contact with fundamentally different modes of life, demands asserted themselves which could not easily be made tq harmonize with the letter of the law. I t is only f r o m this point of view that the dull pedantry of the legal scholars can interest the historian of religion and culture. With this in mind I have, therefore, alluded to these matters of significance f o r religious ethics. The discussion will prepare us f o r what we shall have to say in the last chapter about the adaptation to new conditions.

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10. But before closing we must speak here of two harmful consequences which issued from these subtleties, arising from such training of the theological mind. The one concerns a general bent of the mind called forth by such efforts, the other an erroneous value put upon the religious life as such, at the expense of the religious sentiment. The predominance of the spirit of casuistry and hairsplitting, especially in 'Irak, 1 was directly due to the increase of the tendencies just described. Those who propose to explain the word of Grod and to regulate life accordingly, lose themselves in absurd subtleties and useless sophistries, in devising possibilities which never occur, and in the investigating of puzzling questions, in which the most subtle casuistry is closely united with the play of the boldest, most reckless phantasy. Disputes arise over farfetched cases in law never actually occurring and casuistically constructed, as for instance what pretension to an inheritance a great grandfather of the fifth degree could have in the property of a great grandchild of the fifth degree who died childless. 2 And this is a relatively moderate case. Even in earlier times laws of inheritance with their many possibilities, were an especially favorite and suited arena for these mental gymnastics of a casuistic order. 3 The popular superstitions also offer material for such use. Since the people regarded the metamorphosis of men into animals as within the range of natural occurrences, questions concerning the relation of such bewitched individuals, and their legal responsibilities were seriously discussed. 4 On the other hand, since demons often take on human form, the religious consequences of such a change were considered, as for example, it was argued in all seriousness, whether such beings were to be included for the necessary number of those taking p a r t in the Friday services. 5 Furthermore, the divine law must also decide

72

MOHAMMED AND ISLAM.

how the human offspring resulting from the marriage of a demon to a human being, a natural possibility in the minds of the people, should be treated; what in the laws regulating family life such a marriage entailed. In fact, the question of the jinn marriage 6 —marital combinations with demons—was treated in this circle with as much seriousness as any important instance of canonical law.7 The defendants of such combinations, to whom Hasan al-Basri also belongs, offer examples of such alliances with followers of the Sunna. Damlri, the compiler of a very important zoological dictionary, who has included such data in his article on the " j i n n , " speaks of his personal acquaintance with a sheikh, who had lived in marital relations with four demon-women. The legal subtlety further devises artifices which serve men under certain circumstances,—legal fictions which form an integral part of the Fikh. They are frequently of use in appeasing the conscience in the matter of oaths. The legal scholar is consulted for the contrivance of "evasions," a phase of his activity that cannot be extolled as a factor of the ethical sentiment in social life. According to a poet of the time of the Omayyads, " t h e r e is no good in an oath which cannot be evaded." 8 Legal study gallantly met these requirements more than half way. Although the other schools were not behind in all this, the Hanifite school, whose cradle was in the 'Irak, did most in inventing these devices.8 It followed in this respect the example of its master, the great interpreter who devoted a long digression in his exhaustive commentary of the Koran, to the presentation of the excellence of the Imam Abu Hanlfa. Most of the evidences which he gives of his profound legal knowledge refer to the solution of difficult questions concerning laws dealing with oaths. 10 One must acknowledge it is not only the pious mind

THE DEVELOPMENT OF LAW.

73

which, rebels against the intimate union of such matters with religion and the word of God, brought about by the ruling theology. We shall be able to see the strongest example of such a resistance in the eleventh century, A. D. (chapter IV). But it is also the popular sense of humor which exposes these theological legal pettifoggers and their self-complacent arrogance through its sarcasm. Abu Yusuf, a disciple of Abu Hanifa whom we just mentioned (d. 182/795), the great Kadi of the caliph al-Mahdl and Harun al-Raschid, is the literary butt of the wit of the people, amusing themselves at the expense of lawyers; he also found his way into the Arabian Nights. Secondly let us note the harmful consequences on the trend of religious life. The predominance of casuistical efforts in relation to legal religious science, gradually impressed a legalistic character upon the teachings of Islam. As I have said elsewhere: " U n d e r the influence of this tendency religions life itself was placed under a legal control, which naturally could not be favorable to the propagation of true piety and godliness. Consequently the faithful follower of Islam stands, even in his own view, from now on, under the constraint of human laws, in relation to which the word of God, which to him is the means and source of devotion, regulates only an unimportant part of the observances of life, and retires into the background. Those who investigate the practical application of law with the help of legal niceties and who keep watch over the punctilious adherence to it, are recognized as religious teachers. It is only to this class, not to the philosophers of religion or to the moralists, not to mention the advocates of human science, that the word ascribed to the prophet r e f e r s : 'The scholars ('ulema) of my community are like the prophets of the Children of Israel.' " X1 We have already shown that there were not wanting

74

MOHAMMED AND ISLAM.

earnest men who raised their voices in vigorous condemnation of this deviation from the religious ideal as it very early manifested itself in Islam, and who earnestly strove to save the inner religious life from the clutches of the hair-splitting lawyers of religion. We have seen that they could claim reliable Hadith. Before we can understand them we must undertake to find our way through the dogmatic development of Islam.

NOTES.

75

NOTES. I . 1. Abraham Kuenen, " N a t i o n a l Religions and Universal Religions." (Hibbert Lectures 1882) 293. 2. See for example Ibn S a ' d IV, I I 76, 25.—Ancient traditions concerning the impost tariff Huh. Stud. I I 50 note 3; 51 note 3. Outside of the tariff the tax collectors are given written instructions of a positive nature, which have to do with the careful administration of the tariff, ibid. V I 45, 16. I I . 1. " I n the earliest times the Arabs were not fanatical, but were on almost brotherly terms with their Christian Semitic cousins. However, after the latter had very soon become Moslems, they brought into the new religion that implacability and blind hostility toward the believers of Byzantium, which formerly had been the cause of the decline of oriental Christendom. Leone Caetani " D a s historische Studium des I s l a m s " (Berlin 1908, from a lecture at the international historical congress held in Berlin) 9. 2. Cf. ' O m a r ' s application of this principle to his Christian slaves. Ibn S a ' d V I 110, 2. Proselytism is not ascribed even to Mohammed. " I f you turn to Islam, it is well; if not, then remain (in your former f a i t h ) ; Islam is w i d e " (or broad, ibid. 30, 10). 3. According to K i f t i ed. Lippert 319, 16 ff., MaimunI, who before his emigration had been forced to assume in Spain f o r a short time the appearance of a Moslem, was denounced in Egypt where he stood a t the head of Judaism, by a Spanish Moslem fanatic, Abu-l-'Arab, who reported him to the government as an apostate. According to the law, death is the punishment f o r apostasy. 'Abdalrahlm ibn 'All, famous as al-Kadi al-fadil, pronounced the sentence however ' ' that the confession of Islam by a person who is forced to it, is invalid according to the religious l a w , " so the charge of apostasy could not be carried out. The M u f t i of Constantinople made the same decision toward the end of the 17th century, in the matter of the Maronite emir Yunus, who was forced by the Pasha of Tripoli to confess Islam, but very soon a f t e r openly renewed his allegiance to Christianity. The M u f t i gave the verdict that the enforced confession of Islam was null and void. The Sultan ratified the M u f t i ' s verdict. The contemporary patriarch of Antioch, Stephanus Petrus, alludes to this in a circular letter: " p o s t e a curavit (Yunus) offerri sibi litteras ab ipse magno Turcarum Rege atque Judicum sententias, quibus declarabatur negationem i'idei ab ipso per vim extortam irritam esse et invalidam." (De la Roque, " V o y a g e du Syrie et du Mont Libanon " — P a r i s 1722—11 270-71) cf. also Moulavi Kheragh 'All, " T h e proposed political, legal and social Reforms in the

MOHAMMED AND ISLAM. Ottoman Empire (Bombay 1883) 50-58," concerning the question of the treatment of apostasy in Islam. 4. "Wakidî ed. Wellhausen ("Skizzen und Y o r a r b e i t e n " I V ) . Text 77, 1. 5. Balàdorï, " L i b e r expugnationis r e g i o n u m " ed. de Goeje 71, 12. 6. Cf. de Goeje, "Mémoire sur la Conquête de la S y r i e " (Leiden 1900) 106. 147. 6a. See about such agreements and their criticism Caetani " A n n a l i dell I s l a m " I I I 381; 956-59. 7. So, for example, if we assume that a t the conquest of Syria the Christians were forbidden to let the knockers (nâlcûs) of their Churches be heard, an anecdote told of the Caliph Mu' àwiyya by Ibn Kuteiba ' TJyun al-ak~h~bâr, ed. Brockelmann 138, 11 fE., would be impossible. The noise of these knockers disturbs the aging caliph; he sends a messenger to Byzanz to cause the cessation of the noise. For the building of Churches cf. ZDMG X X X V I I I 674. 8. Tabarî I 2922, 6 fE. ' Omar deprecates the use of violent measures towards the conquered, on account of the separatists. The prophet has said: " H e who tortures man in this world, him will God torture on the day of judgment. ' ' Yà' kûbï, ' ' Historiae ' ' ed. Houtsma I I 168, 11. cf. the instruction given to the governor of the district of Emesa (Ibn S a ' d IV, I I 14, 8). 9. Balàdorï ibid. 162. The Sheikh ul-Islam Jemal al-dïn must have had maxims of this kind in mind, when in reference to religious equality in the new Turkish constitution, he explained to the correspondent of the " D a i l y N e w s " (August 8, 1908) " Y o u may rest assured that however liberal the constitution is, Islam is still more liberal. ' ' Nevertheless the fanaticism towards unbelievers has, according to a precedent to be examined later, brought into the field sayings of the prophet favoring the harsh treatment of non-Moslems. The prophet's command to prevent unbelievers from giving the salaam-greeting, and to reply to them with ambiguous wordplay, has been received as true even in well substantiated Hadïth. (Bukhârï, Jihâd no. 97, Isti'dân no. 22, Da'awât no. 67. Cf. Ibn S a ' d IV, I I 71, 6; V 393, 26.) That it was nevertheless not always found to be compatible with the spirit of Islam, is evident in the statements of Ibn S a ' d V 363, 26 ; V I , 203, 3 ff. Other utterances of this kind have been rejected as apocryphal, e. g. " When anyone shows a friendly face to a dimml (Jew or Christian ward) it is as if he had punched me in the ribs. ' ' (Ibn H a j a r Fatâwï Tiadïthiyya—Cairo 1307—118) cited as an absolutely unfounded invention : ' ' The prophet once met the angel Gabriel and wished to take his hand; the angel pushed him away with the justification, 'you have just seized the hand

NOTES.

10. I I I . 1.

2. 3.

4.

IY. 1.

77

of a J e w ; you must first perform the ceremonial cleansing (before you may touch m e ) ' " (Dahabl, " M ï z â n a l - i ' t i d ä r , " Lucknow 1301, I I 232, and further ibid. 275 as Tchabar bätil.) " I f anyone (Moslem) has intercourse with a ' d i m m i ' and humbles himself before him, on the day of judgment a stream of fire will be raised between them, and the Moslem will be told: 'Go through the fire to the other side, so that you may settle your account with your community.' " (ibid. I I 575.) At the time of this saying, partnerships between Moslem and Jew were very frequent. The relations arising from it repeatedly form the theme of Jewish theological-legal discussion (see Louis Ginzberg, Geonica, New York 1909, I I 186). The fanatical Haditli seriously warns against such business partnerships, from the standpoint of Islam. Every phase of opinion has been marked with words adapted from the prophet. People like the Hanbalites who take exception to Moslems who differ from them in their social tolerance (ZDMG L X I I 12 ff.), are naturally no less'hostile to those of another faith, and readily cling to the spiteful sayings, while they endeavor to undermine tolerant teachings. I t is characteristic that some (indeed his school) make the Imam Ahmed ibn Hanbal reject as false the tradition, "Whoever harms a dimmî, it is as if he had harmed m e , " (Subkï, Tabakät al-Shüfi'iyya I 268, 6 f r . bel.). The leading Moslem teachings have always taken exception to such views, as well as to the documents upon which their upholders depend. Porter, " F i v e Tears in Damascus."' (London 1870) 235. For example the question whether it is permitted to remove a body from its place of death to another place, is decided by al-Zuhrï by bringing up the precedent that the body of S a ' d ibn abï Wakkâs was brought from al-'Akik to Medina. Ibn Sa'd I I I , I 104-105. ZDMG L X I 863 ff. Judging from some of Ibn S a ' d ' s writings X I 135, 19 ff. important for the conception of the Sünna, it appears that in the 1st century, the opinion was held that only those sayings could count as Sünna which the prophet had attested, not those attested by his companions. But this limitation could not be carried out. " N a h j a l - B a l ä g h a " (the speeches ascribed to 'Ali) I I 75, 7 (ed. Muliammed 'Abduh, Beirut 1307). The word " e s c a p e " is expressed in the text by mahïsan. Cf. Huart, " T e x t e s persans relatifs à la secte des Houroufis" (Leiden-London 1909), Gibb series I X , text, 76, 17 has mis-read this word as masiyyan, and brought out the strange meaning (Tr. 120, 23) " c a r ils ne trouveront pas personne qui en soit châtrée. ' ' Steinschneider, " D i e Hebräischen Übersetzungen des Mittela l t e r s " 852 note 43; also his " R a n g s t r e i t - L i t e r a t u r " (Vienna

MOHAMMED AND ISLAM.

2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.

11. '. 1. 2. 3. 4.

1908, Sitzungsber. d. Akad. d. W. Phil, history Kl. Bd. 155) 58. Much literature of this character can be f o u n d collected by E . Galtier Futiih al-Bahnasa (Mem. Inst, f r a n c , d ' a r c h . orient du Caire X X I I , 1909) 20 note 1. I b n Kayyim al-Jauziyya, Kitab al-ruh ( H a i d a r a b a d 1318.) 294. Bab. Sanhednn 91a. a t the bottom. Bukhari, Kitab al-adab no. 18. Ibid. no. 24. 25. I b n S a ' d I V , I 168 below. I b n Teymiyya, Easai'l (Cairo 1324) I I 342. I b n H a j a r , Isaba ed. Calcutta I I 396. " A t the time of the prophet we regarded hypocrisy as a minor shirk." " A r b a ' i m a l - N a w a w I " no. 38. The critics have sometimes a sharp eye for anachronisms. But endeavor, in their efforts, to j u s t i f y utterances t h a t in their f o r m appear to be authentic, by finding means to set aside inherent difficulties; even to the extent of admitting as possible anticipations of later conditions in the ancient H a d i t h . There is a story in the Musnad of Ahmed b. H a n b a l according to which the woman Ummal-Darda tells how the prophet once saw her in the street and asked her whence she came. " P r o m the b a t h " (hammam) was her answer. I b n al-Jauzi, who was writing a book of his own on false H a d i t h , does not hesitate to throw aside both the story and the moral for which it is the background, on the ground t h a t a t t h a t time there were no baths in Medina. While others quiet the scruples of I b n al-Jauzi in spite of the anachronisms, see I b n H a j a r al-Askalanl, al-Kaul al-musaddad fi-l-dabb' an al-Musnad ( H a i d a r a b a d 1319) 46. Jerus. Talmud Khagiga 1, 8 toward the end. See Kult. d. Gegenw. 108, 7 if. cf. Muh. Studien I I 52 ff. Beihaki, Mahasin ed. Schwally 3 9 2 — " Pseudo-Jahiz " ed. van Yloten 181 above. Cf. ZDMG L X I I note 2. The saying of Yahya b. S a ' i d (d. 143/760) is very i m p o r t a n t f o r judging of this decision: " M e n of (religious) science are people of broad horizon. Differences of opinion are constantly prevailing among those who have to give decisions. W h a t one proclaims as permitted the other holds as forbidden. Nevertheless they are f a r f r o m finding f a u l t with each other. Each one feels the question which is p u t before him weighing on him like a heavy mountain, and when he sees a gate open ( f o r his release) he feels himself relieved of the b u r d e n , " Dahabi, TadTcirat al-huffaz I 124. Y a h y a ' s statements resemble those of E l ' a z a r ibn Azarya (b. Talmud Babli K h a g i g a 3 b) about the difference of opinion in Jewish law ( r e f e r r i n g to Eccles. 12, 11). " A l t h o u g h some proclaim as clean what others hold unclean, some allow

NOTES.

5.

6.

7. 8. 9.

10. YI. 1. 2.

3.

79

what others forbid, some declare as forbidden what others admit . . . nevertheless all (these contradictory opinions) are given by one shepherd, by God, 'who spake all these words' " (Exod. 20, 1). I n like manner it is said of the controversial schools of Shammai and Hillel that ' ' both are the words of the living G o d . " (Talmud Babli Brubhln 13 b.) On the other hand E. Simon ibn Jokhai regards such legal differences of opinion as forgetfulness of the Thora (Sifre, Deuteron. 48 ed. Friedmann 84 b, 11). A very remarkable judgment of later times against the MadhabFanaticism of the Fukaha is to be found in T a j al-din al-Subki, Mu'id al-ni'am wamwbid al-nilcam ed. Myhrman (London 1908) 106-109. At the same time a proof of the f a c t that at the time of the writer (d. 771/1370) such fanatical opinions were very common among the legal authorities of Syria and Egypt. Concerning this principle see my ' ' Z a h i r i t e n " 94 ff. That the differences in religious practice were very early objects of censure, is to be seen in M a ' m u n ' s discussion of it in Taifur, Kitab Baghdad ed. Keller 61, and from a very important passage in an epistle to the caliph ascribed to Ibn al-Mukaffa. (Arab. Zeitschrift Muktdbas I I I 230—Basa'il al-bulagha Cairo 1908 54.) Dahabi, Miean al-i'tidal I I 370. MuhibbI, Khulasat al-athar ft a'yan al-Tcam al-hadi'ashar (Cairo 1284) I 48, Ibrahim ibn Muslim al-Samadi (d. 1662). For example Ibn al-Kalanisi, ' ' History of Damascus'' ed. Amedroz 311 (from the 6th century of the H i j r a ) the K a d i who is introduced as an illustration, gives his decisions on the ground of Hanifite and Hanbalite Madhab, cf. the present attribute mufti al-firal; i. e. m u f t i of the various parties, to whom he can give decisions in each case from the standpoint of their own Madhab teachings. Cf. Kult. d. gegenw. 104, 13-29. Kens al-'ummal V I 233 no. 4157 from Musnad Ahmed. Their consensus can only be one upheld by errors; " f a - i j m a 'uhum m a ' s u m " (Ibn Teymiyya, Rasa'il I 17, 3; 82, 10). Ma'sum (upheld immune) means about the same thing as infallible; the same expression as the one applied to the infallibility of the prophets and Imams. (See below Y § 10.) wa nuslihi. E. Palmer translates: " W e will make him reach h e l l " on the assumption that only the 1st form and not the 4th conjugation of the verb sola can have the meaning of cook, burn, heat. Baidawi confirms this distinction ib., who gives the meaning ajala ( I V stem) to let one come in, for the colloquial reading. E u t from the statements in Lisan al Arab X I X 201 it is evident that the 4th form also permits of the translation we prefer.

80

MOHAMMED AND ISLAM. 4. Subki, Tabalcat al-Shafi'iyya I I 19 below. Elsewhere the collection of Koranic evidence does not seem to have cost the Shafi'i so much trouble. He finds for example in Sura 98 v. 4 the strongest proof against the teachings of the Murjiites (Subki 1. c. I 227) rather far-fetched. Later other Koranic proofs have been found for the Ijma-teachings; as for example Fakhr al-din al-Eazi ( M a f a t i h al-giiaib I I I 38) deduces it from Surah 3 v. 106. cf. for other documentary proofs Snouck Hurgronje in " R e v u e de l'Histoire des Religions" X X X V I I (1898) 17.

5. Abu Dawud I I 131. Tirmidi I I 25, Baghawi, Masabih al-Sunna I 14. V I I . 1. Cf. about this question and the Koran material involved, Snouck Hurgronje in his review of Van den B e r g ' s "Beginseln van het Mohammedaansche R e c h t " 1 art. 26-27 of the reprint; " J u y n boll Handbuch des Islamischen Gesetzes" (Leiden 1908) 175 ff. 2. Cf. the casuistic, and in part quite preposterous questions, in Jahiz, Mayawati V I 52, laid before Sha' bi. With reference to the Sura 6 v. 146 ( " I find in t h a t which is revealed to me, nothing forbidden for those eating, that they may enjoy &c. . . . " ) he proclaims the eating of elephant flesh as permissible. 3. I n the zoological encyclopedia of Damiri, the author at the close of each article treats the question of the legal religious position of the animal in question, as well as the differences in this regard of the madahib. 4. Cf. About these categories ' ' Z a h i r i t e n " 66 ff. Juynboll. ' ' Handbuch des Islamischen Gesetzes " 56 ff. 5. Cf. especially Zurkani to Muwatta (Cairo 1279/80) I I I 184. 6. Friedrich Kern has discussed most extensively the literature of this branch of Moslem jurisprudence, ZDMG LV 61 ff. and in the introduction to his work of the Kitab ikhtilaf al-fukaha. of Tabarl (Cairo 1902) 4-8 on the difference of the schools. Among the comprehensive works, the big " B o o k of the S c a l e s " by the Egyptian mystic ' A b d al-Wahhab al-Sha'rani (d. 973/1565) is the one most used. This work has been partly translated into French by Perron: " B a l a n c e de la loi Musulmane ou Esprit de la legislation islamique et divergences de ses quatre rites jurisprudentiels" (Algiers 1898 published by the general government of Algeria). V I I I . 1. Bukh., Iman no. 28. The sentence has also been cited verse, Noldeke-Schwally "Gesch. d. K o r a n s " 181. 2. Bukh., Ilm no. 12; Wudu' no. 61; Adab no. 79. 3. Ibn S a ' d VI 126, 3. 4. 'Abdalbarr al-Namarl, J ami' bayan al-ilm wa-fadlihi in extract form, Cairo 1320) 115, 9. Cf. with this Talmudic principle: " t h e power to permit is more Talmud Babli Berakhoth 60a and frequently.

as a Koran

(published aspect the valuable,"

NOTES.

81

5. " D a m î r ï , " " H a y â t al-hayawân," s. v. sun jab I I 41, 21. 6. The Hadïth in the Bukh. ; K. al i'tisäm no. 16 treats of this. 7. Al-Dârimï, Sunan (Cawnpore 1293) 36. The (permitted) account gives a meaning if one substitutes for halal of the text the expression "absolutely commanded" as I have assumed. 8. Ibn. S a ' d VI, 244, 20. 9. According to the Nomokanon of the Barhebraeus also, must " t h e name of the living God be invoked in b a t t l e . " (See Bockenhoff, ."Speisegesetze Mosaischer A r t in mittelalterlichen Kirchenrechtsquellen"—Münster 1907-49.) See concerning the same facts in the Nomokanon, S. Fraenkel, Deutsche Literaturz. 1900, 188. 10. Cf. Ibn S a ' d Y I 166, 21. 11. Muwatta I I 356. See my article " B i s m i l l â h " in Hastings Encyclopedia of Religion and Ethics I I 667b. 12. Gf. Subki, Mu'id al-ni'am ed. Myhrman 203, 10. I X . 1. This subject is now well handled by Caetani 1. e. 449. 477: " I I vino presso gli Arabi antichi e nei primi tempidell' I s l a m . " l a . " M u h . S t u d . " I 21 ff. cf. now also Lammens, " E t u d e s sur le règne du Calife M o ' â w i y y a " I 411 (Mélanges Beyrouth I I I 275). 2. The poets of the 'Omayyad epoch sometimes declare the wine of which they speak, explicity " h a l â l " (legally permitted); Jemïl al-'Udri (Aghânî, V I I , 79, 15). Ibn Kais al Rukayyât (ed. Rhodokanakis 57, 5 àhallahu AUahu lanä). "We must not deduce from this an allusion to the distinctions of the theologians (Ichizänat al-adàb I V 201). 3. Usd al-ghäba V 161, Suheilï, commentaries of Ibn Hishâm ed. Wüstenfeld I I 175. 4. Cf. Subkï ed. Myhrman 147. 5. Nasa 'i, Sunan (ed. Shahdra 1282) I I 263-269. 6. Nabïd also means a drink of which the prophet himself partook. Ibn S a ' d I I , I 131, 5. 9. 7. That, however, conscience troubled a good many on this question, is shown in the story to the effect, that the Caliph, Ma'mün, who allowed the Kâdï Yahyâ ibn Aktham to be present a t his meals a t which he himself indulged in the " n a b ï d , " never offered the Kâdï a drink. " I cannot suffer a K â d ï to drink n a b ï d . " T a y f ü r Kitäb Baghdad 258, 8 ff. Ma'mün expressed himself in the same way toward the Kâdï of Damaseus, who rejects the date-nabïd offered him. Aghânî X 124, 12. 8. Ibn Sa' d V 276, 16. 9. Yaküt ed. Margoliouth I I 261, 2. 10. Mas'ûdï, Murüj (ed. Paris) V I I I 105, 4. 11. Kâlï, Amâlï (Büläk 1324) I I 48, 12. 12. Ibn Knteiba, Uyun al-ATchbär ed. Brockelmann 373, 17. The monograph of Ibn Kut. concerning drinks there mentioned, for

MOHAMMED AND ISLAM.

13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 1.

2. 3.

4. 5. 6.

which until now we had been directed to the compendium in Ikd al-farid, has now been published by A. Guy in the Cairo Arabic monthly Al-Mulftabas I I (1325/1907) 234-248; 387-392; 529-535. Ibn S a ' d YI 67 penult.; 175, 20. Dahabi, Tadkirat al-huffaz I 281. Ibn Khallikan ed. Wiistenfeld no. 217. Ibid. no. 290. Ibid. no. 733. Ibn S a ' d Y I 64, 3. 7. Usd al-ghaba V 12, 1. Bukh., Ashriba no. 6. In the ' I r a k the taulild (the discussion of questions of belief) was moved to the background; the filch is predominant ( ' A t t a r , Tadkirat al-auliyya I I 175 above). Ibn Khallikan no. 803. Cf. Th. W. Juynboll's article ATcdariya in the Encyclopedia of Islam I 242. The question of the inheritance of a grandfather was from ancient times an object of legal casuistry (Ibn S a ' d X I 100, 9) and of difference of opinion. (Damiri I 351, s. v. hayya.) Cf. Kitab al-imama walsiyasa (Cairo 1904) I I 76. The accounts collected in the Kens al-'ummal Y I 14-18 concerning this question of inheritance give a very instructive glimpse of the conditions of the rise of jurisprudence in the early days of Islam. Damiri I I 289-90, s. v. Urd. Ibid. I 265, s. v. jinn. Sexual relations between men and jinn is a type of fable which passed from the Babylonian group of stories, through the medium of the folk-lore of the Arabs, into Moslem superstitions. The names of persons of ancient Arabia as well as those of other peoples who were the f r u i t of such a misalliance are given. Cf. Jahiz, Hayawan I 85 ff., where such fables are energetically rejected. Jahiz calls those who concede such a possibility "wicked scholars" and declares explicitly that he only cites the report. (Cf. also Damiri I I 25-27 s. v. si 'lat.) Examples of Moslem popular beliefs by E. Campbell Thompson, " P r o c . of Soc. of Bibl. A r c h . " X X V I I I 83 and Sayce. " F o l k l o r e " 1900 I I 388. The reality of such a union can also be deduced from the Koran 17 v. 66, 55 v. 56. 74 (Damiri 1. c. 27, 19). The difference in species of those contracting such a union (with reference to Sura 16 v. 74 " A l l a h has given you wives from yourselves") was brought to bear by the religious laws as impedimentum dirimens, against the permissibleness of such alliances, but was not everywhere recognized as such (Subki, TabaTcat al-Shafiiyya V 45, 5, f r . bel.). I t is evident that this

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legal repudiation of such unions, was not taken as indisputable, for Yahyâ ibn M a ' m and other orthodox authorities attribute the keenness of several scholars whom they mention by name to the f a c t that one of their parents was a J i n n (Dahabï, " T a d kirat a l - h u f f â z " I I 149). Ibn Khallikân mentions a foster brother of the Jinns no. 763. Cf. also " A b h a n d l . zur a r a b P h i l " I I C V I I I ; now also Macdonald, " T h e Religious Attitude and L i f e in Islam ' ' 143 f. ; 155. Alfred Bel recounts that the people of Tlemcen had it from an inhabitant of the town who had died not long since (1908) that besides his legitimate wife he had also been married to a Jinniyya. ( " La population musulmane de Tlemcen" 7 des S.-A. from " R e v u e des études ethnographiques et sociologiques" 1908.) The question as to whether angels and jinn have the lawful right to acquire possessions is discussed f r o m the legal point of view. (Subkl 1. c. Y 179.) 7. Cf. " A b h a n d l . zur Arab. P h i l . " I 109. We can here name al-Shâfi'ï as the exception to the ruling spirit of theological jurists. His school proclaims the following principle founded on his teaching. " I f an otherwise irreproachable man announced that he had seen Jinn, we would consider him unfit f o r legal evidence." (Subki 1. c. I 258, 4 f r . bel.) 8. J a r ï r , Dïwân (ed. Cairo 1313) I I 128, 13; Nalcâ'id ed. Bevan 754, 3. 9. ZDMG L X 223. Abu Yusuf was the first to publish a tractate on such Myal (Jâhiz Sayawân I I I 4, 2). And from this time on this subject forms a permanent part of the practical filch, especially in the Hanifite school. One of the earliest works of this kind by Abu Bekr Ahmed al-Khassâf (d. 261/874) the court-jurist of the caliph al-Muhtadï, is the standard work of this kind of law; this work is now also generally accessible in a Cairo edition (1314). 10. Mafâtïh al-ghaib I 411-413. 11. Kultur d. Gegenw. I l l , 16 ff.

C H A P T E R III. DOGMATIC DEVELOPMENT.

A prophet is not a theologian. The message which he brings, springing from an impulse of Ms inner consciousness, and the conception of faith which he creates, do not present themselves as a carefully planned system. Indeed he generally defies the temptation to form a definite system. It is only in later generations, when the principles which inspired the first followers had taken deep root and led to the formation of a compact community, that the efforts of those who feel themselves the chosen interpreters of the prophetic utterances, 1 find acceptance, through the events taking place within the community as well as through external influences of the broader environment. These interpreters supplement and round off deficiencies in the teachings of the prophet, while often offering an incongruous interpreting of these teachings,—and ascribing meanings that were never intended by the founder. They give answers to questions which had never occurred to him, remove contradictions which had not in the least troubled him, devise vapid formulas and erect a broad rampart of association of ideas, by means of which they endeavor to insure these formulas from internal and external attack. They then derive from the words of the prophet and often f r o m his letters, the sum total of their well-organized and systematized doctrines, and on this ground claim these teachings as those which he had in view from the very beginning. They quarrel over them and with sharp-witted and subtle arguments polemicize in arrogant fashion against those who, by the same means, reach other conclusions drawn from the living words of the prophet.

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Such efforts presuppose the canonical summary and the definite form of the prophetic utterances as a sacred writing. Dogmatic commentaries gather round the sacred texts and obscure the spirit which originally imbued them. These commentaries are more concerned with proof than with explanation; they constitute the steady sources from which flow the speculations of the dogmatic systematizers. Very shortly after its birth Islam also enters into a like theological development. Synchronous with the events which form the subject matter of our second chapter, the religious content of Islam became an object of reflection ; parallel with the development of ritualistic speculation there arises an Islamic dogmatic theology. It would be a difficult task to build up from the Koran itself a unified system of dogma compact in itself and free from contradictions. For the most important religious doctrines we obtain merely general impressions which in many of their details are contradictory. The religious conceptions reflected in the prophet's soul vary in color according to the predominating mood. Yery soon therefore, the task of reconciling the theoretical difficulties arising from such contradictions was laid upon a harmonizing theology. In the case of Mohammed the search for contradictions in his teachings seems very early to have begun. The revelations of the prophet were even in his lifetime exposed to critics who were lying in wait for its defects. The indecision, the contradictory character of his teachings, were objects of derisive remarks. As a result, however much he may once have stressed the fact that he reveals " a clear Arabic Koran, free from deviations" (Sura 39, v. 29; cf. 18, v. 1; 41, v. 2), in Medina he had to admit that in the divine revelation "some of its signs are of themselves perspicuous,—these are the basis of the Book—and others are figurative. But

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they whose hearts are given to err, seek for what is perplexing to arouse unrest, yet none knoweth its interpretation but God. And those firm in knowledge say: 'We believe in it: it is all from God our Lord' " (Sura 3,v.5). Such criticism of the Koran was especially marked in the next generation since not only the opponents of Islam were busy with the discovery of its weaknesses, but even in the company of the faithful the apparent contradictions in the Koran formed the subject of discussion. An example will presently be introduced to show how the Koran could supply arguments both for and against one of the fundamental tenets of the religion,—to wit, the question of the freedom of the will. As in all other aspects of the internal history of Islam, it is the Hadith that affords the picture of this spiritual agitation in the community. According to the Hadith the question is traced back to the time of the prophet, and he is drawn into the discussion. In reality the question belongs to the time of budding theological reflection. The Hadith claims that the faithful began troubling the prophet himself by pointing out the dogmatic contradictions in the Koran. Such debates aroused his wrath. " T h e Koran," he says, "was not revealed so that you should fight one part as a weapon against another, as earlier people did with the revelations of their prophets. In the Koran rather, one thing corroborates the other. Act according to that which you understand; that which arouses perplexity in you, take on faith.' ' 2 The view of the naive believer is announced as the word of the prophet. Such is the Hadith's method. II. It was partly owing to political conditions, and partly to the impelling effect of external contact that the group of earlier adherents, little accustomed to dogmatic subtleties, was forced to take a stand in regard

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to the questions to which the Koran gives no direct or definite answer. A s a proof that it was the political situation which gave rise to the internal dogmatic issues, we may point to the Omayyad revolution which offered the first occasion in the history of Islam, to pass beyond the discussion of new political conditions and public law, to the domain of theology and to decide from the viewpoint of religious requirements, the constitution of the organization. A t this stage we must once more come back to a point in the earlier history of Islam that we have already touched upon in the preceding chapter, namely the question of the religious character of the Omayyad rule. The view formerly current regarding the relationship of the Omayyads to the religion of Islam may now be regarded as entirely set aside. Following Islamic historical traditions, the Omayyads and the spirit of their government were formerly harshly contrasted with the religious requirements of Islam. The rulers of this dynasty, its governors and government officials, were represented as heirs of the old enemies of rising Islam, against which the old spirit, of the Koreish hostility, or at least of indifference toward Islam, revived in new forms. To be sure they were not pietists and strict observers. The life at their court did not accord in every thing with that narrowing, self-denying standard which the pious expected the heads of the Moslem state to uphold, and the details of which they proclaimed in their Hadiths as laws imposed by the prophet. While it is true that stories of the details of the pious practices of some of them have come down to us,1 they surely would not come up to the standard of the pietists whom the Medina government under Abu Bekr and 'Omar held up as ideals. We cannot deny to them the consciousness that they

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stood as Caliphs or Imams at the head of a kingdom built lip on the basis of religious revolution, and that they regarded themselves as faithful followers of Islam. 2 To be sure, there is a wide gulf between their ideas of the government of the Islamic state, and the pietistic expectations of the strict observers who witnessed their deeds with impotent displeasure, and to whose partisans we owe to a great extent the transmission of their history. In the estimation of " r e a d e r s of the K o r a n " they failed to comprehend their duty to Islam. Their idea was to lead Islam into new paths. One of their strongest advocates,—the ill-famed H a j â j ibn Yusuf,—reflects their attitude when he makes a scoffing remark about the "ancien régime" by the sick-bed of 'Omar's son.3 It is undoubtedly a new system which enters with them. The Omayyads frankly viewed Islam " f r o m the political side by which he had united the Arabians and led them to the conquest of the world." 4 The satisfaction which they find in the religion is largely based on the fact that through Islam " g r e a t fame has been attained, the rank and the inheritance of the people have been secured." 5 They considered it their task, as rulers, to maintain and spread, both at home and abroad, this political power of Islam, and in this way rendered a service to religion. Whoever opposes them is treated as a rebel against Islam, much as the Israelite King Ahab treated the zealous prophets as "ôkhér J i s r â ' ê l , " troubler of Israel (I Kings, 18:17). When they are fighting insurgents, who base their revolt on religious grounds, they are convinced that they are dutifully using the sword to punish the enemies of Islam, in the interests of Islamic progress and stability. 6 Even when they attacked sacred cities, and directed their missiles against the Ka'ba, an act which for centuries their pious enemies laid at their door as a heinous profanation, they themselves believed that whenever the needs of the state

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demanded it, the enemies of Islam should be punished, and the revolutionary movements, directed against the unity, and the internal power of the state, should be quelled. 7 All those who in any way disturbed the unity of the state, consolidated by the statesmanship of this caliphate, were regarded by it as enemies of Islam. I n spite of all their partiality f o r the prophet's family the proof of which Lammens, in his recent work on Mu'awiyya's 8 dynasty, was the first to collect, they oppose the ' Allite pretenders, who were threatening their state. They do not shun the day of Kerbelâ, whose bloody field furnishes to the present time the subject of m a r t y r ologies of their bitter Shiitic opponents. The interests of Islam were not to be separated f r o m those of the state. The attainment of power was identical with religious success. Their f a i t h f u l followers appreciated their acts as performed in the interest of Islam. I n the panegyrics of the poets belonging to their group they are continually celebrated as the defenders of Islam. Among their partisans there were groups who even went so f a r as to attach to their person the same religious sanctification which the champions of the rights of the family of the prophet ascribed to the 'Alïite pretenders, by virtue of their holy descent. 9 This was not the view of those pious people who dreamt of a kingdom not of this world and who under various pretexts opposed the Omayyad dynasty and the spirit of its government. According to the judgment of most of them this dynasty rested on a sin t h a t became a hereditary element. The new government was unlawful and irreligious in the eyes of those dreamers. I t did not accord with their theocratic ideals, and appeared a hindrance to the practical realization of the kingdom of God f o r which they were striving. I n its very beginnings it curtailed the rights of the holy family of the prophet and in its political activities showed

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itself absolutely reckless toward the sanctuaries of Islam. Moreover in the estimation of the pious, the rulers of this dynasty did not in their personal bearing, rigidly conform to the ideal law of Islam, and were regarded as people, " w h o , " as the first 'Allite pretender Husein, the grandson of the prophet is reported to have said, "obey Satan, and forsake God, are publicly corrupt, thwart divine commands, appropriate to themselves an unlawful share of the booty of war, 10 permit that which is forbidden by God, and forbid that which is permitted by him." 1 1 They forsake the sacred Sunna and issue arbitrary decrees, that run counter to religious ordinances. 12 The imperative demand of the irreconcilable religious party was, that such people should be strenuously opposed, or that at least every sign of recognition of their rule should be passively withheld. I t was easy to maintain such a position, but all the more difficult to convert the theory into practice. However, the welfare of the state, and the interest of the religious community being regarded as the first concern, it was imperative to avoid all agitation, and therefore to endure the existing government. Their appeal to the judgment of God, expressed in pious curses, 13 proved an impotent weapon. That which God tolerates, man may not oppose. He may cling to the hope that God will in the future fill with righteousness the world which now is filled with unrighteousness. Out of these silent hopes arose the Mahdi idea, the firm belief in the future resurrection of a theocratic ruler divinely guided (as a reconciliation between the actual and the ideal). We will return to this later on. (Chapter Y, 12.) One of the external indications of authority in Islam was a function connected with the theocratic character of the prince,—the function which the ruler or his substitute fulfilled as leader in public worship,—i. e., of the Imam,

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the liturgical head. However much it might irritate the pious to behold the representative of godlessness in this sacred role,—from which a state of intoxication even did not debar them,—they reconciled themselves to it. I t was permissible, in the interests of peace in the state, to perform one's salat (prayer) standing behind the pious and the evil-doer. On this formula the tolerance of the pious was based. But they did not all stop at this passive attitude. The question had to be adjusted on principle also. The experiences of daily life, the convictions of the irreconcilable advocates of religious demands, forced into prominence the question as to whether it was altogether right to exclude entirely from the faith the transgressor of law and to regard oneself as forced to submit to power. They are, after all, Moslems who confess God and the prophet with their hearts as well as their lips. It is true, they are guilty of infringing the law which was looked upon as disobedience and insubordination, nevertheless, they are believers. A large party answered this question in a sense which accorded much more with the demands of actual conditions, than the average standpoint of passive tolerance. They advanced the theory that it is a question of confession. To the believer practices cannot be harmful, any more than lawful deeds can be of use to the unbeliever. Fiat applicatio. The Omayyads, then, must be looked upon as truly good Moslems; they were to be recognized as ahl al-hibla, included among the people who turn toward the Kibla (the Ka'ba in Mecca) in prayer, and who thereby confess themselves, as of the company of the true believers. The scruples of the pious, it was held, were quite without foundation. The party, whose followers theoretically set up this tolerant teaching, called themselves Murji'a,14 The word means " p o s t p o n e r s , " that is to say they did not pretend to judge the fate of men, but left it to God to sit in

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judgment on them.15 As to their temporal relations they were satisfied with the knowledge of their incorporation in the community of the faithful. 16 A similar tolerant judgment had already prevailed in an earlier period of internal strife, when those debating, at the time, the stormy question as to whether ' Othman or 'All were to be regarded as orthodox or sinner, and in the latter case unworthy of the caliphate, did not take a partisan attitude but left the decision of the question to God.17 Such a modest view naturally did not suit the pious element who saw vain ungodliness and disgrace in the ruling politics of the state and in those who advocated them. Moreover the indulgent views of the Murjis were in direct opposition to those of the followers of the 'Allite claims, with their idea of a theocratic state, founded on divine right and to be ruled by the family of the prophet. For this reason the Murjis and the followers of 'All stand in sharp opposition to one another.18 The opposition to another seditious movement was much more decisive. As the successes of the Omayyads increased and the objections of the opposing party culminated, certain of the Murji' partisans took occasion to define their principles, to go one step farther in their declarations and definitely to waive the charge of heresy against the ruling dynasty. This was all the more possible since the Kharijites (to be mentioned again later—Chapter V, 2), the bitterest political opponents of the existing form of government, were troubling the kingdom with the rebellious assertion that it was not simply a question of general belief, but that the commission of serious transgressions should mercilessly exclude men from the faith. What then shall be said for the poor Omayyads, who were considered by the Kharijites as the worst legal transgressors? 19 The reason for the origin of this dissension, which goes

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back to the early days of Islam, though a definite date cannot be set for it, is accordingly to be found in the peculiarity of the political form and in the position which the various social strata of the Moslem people adopted in regard to it. The discussion of the question as to what role should be accorded to the 'amal,—works,—in the qualification of a Moslem as such, did not arise first of all from any dogmatic need.20 A time, however, came in which the state is no longer primarily interested in the answer to this question. It thereupon becomes a question of common academic interest and further complicated by the addition of some dogmatic minutiae and subtleties. If ''works" do not form a necessary element in the definition of orthodoxy,—say the opponents,—then a hair-splitting Murji' might conclude that a person could not be branded as a kafir because he bows before the sun: such a deed is only a sign of unbelief, not unbelief in itself (kufr). 21 One particular question of dogmatic difference about which the Islamic theologians were constantly indulging in sophistries, developed from the Murji'ite mode of thought: is it possible to distinguish in the true faith, between an accurately graded more or less ! Naturally according to the opinion of the people who do not regard practice as an integral part of Islamic qualifications, such a distinction does not hold. It is not a question of extent. Belief cannot be measured by ells, nor can it be weighed in the balance. On the other hand, those who consider practice as well as confession, a necessary element in the definition of a true Moslem, admit the possibility of an arithmetic measurement of the extent of belief. The Koran itself, indeed, speaks of the "increase of belief" (Sura 3, v. 167; 8, v. 2; 9, v. 125) and of guidance (Sura 47, v. 19). The larger or smaller extent of belief is measured by the larger or smaller amount of "works." Orthodox Islamic theology is not theoretically

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a unit on this question. Side by side with dogmatists who wish to hear nothing concerning a plus or minus in relation to belief, there are also those who hold to the formula: '' Faith is confession and works, it can be therefore added to or diminished." 22 It depends indeed on the direction of one's orthodoxy. Thus a controversial question which arose on political ground ended in such finesses as these.23 I I I . Nevertheless about the same time there arose in connection with another question, the beginnings of truly dogmatic interest. In general those discussing these questions did not indulge in sophistries as to whether this or that person could be regarded as a true believer. They maintained, however, with an extraordinarily definite view of their own beliefs, a very definite position toward the naive beliefs of the people not given to reflection. The first unsettling of naive belief in Islam is not contemporaneous with the entrance of scientific speculation, as though a result of the latter. I t is not due to growing intellectualism. I t appears, rather, to have been called forth through a deeper insight into questions of belief: through piety, and not through unrestrained thought. The idea of absolute dependence had given rise to the grossest representations of the deity. Allah is an unrestrained potentate: " h e cannot be questioned as to what he does" (Sura 21, v. 23). Man is a plaything in his hands, without a will of his own. One must be convinced that the will of Allah cannot be measured by human will, bounded by limitations of all kinds, and that human ability crumples into nothing beside the unlimited will of Allah and his absolute power. This power of Allah dominates the human will. Man can wish only where Allah guides his will; and this is true also with regard to his moral acts. Concerning these his will is

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determined by the almighty power and eternal decree of God. Bnt the faithful must clearly understand that Allah does not constrain man. They must not imagine him as salim, unjust or tyrannical or exerting such power as would mar the conception of even a human ruler. Indeed, it is in connection with reward and punishment that the Koran repeatedly asserts that Allah does no injustice toward anyone, not even so much O.S cl fibre of a date (kernel) (Sura 4, v. 52) or " a s a pit in the s e e d " (v. 123); " t h a t he lays no burden on anyone which cannot be borne; that he has a book which speaks the truth, and no injustice will reach t h e m " (Sura 23, v. 64). " A n d Allah has created heaven and earth in truth, and in order to reward each soul according to what it deserves, and injustice shall not reach t h e m " (Sura 45, v. 21). But, on the other hand, the pious man must raise the question whether there can be a greater injustice than to punish actions, the definite will to perform which does not lie within the range of human ability; is it conceivable that God should rob man of all freedom and selfdetermination in action, determine his behaviour even to the smallest details, take from the sinner the possibility of doing good, "seal up his heart, spread a thick covering over his sight and h e a r i n g " (Sura 2, v. 6) and then in spite of this punish him on account of his disobedience, condemn him to eternal torture 1 By virtue of an exaggerated feeling of dependence, many very pious Moslems preferred to imagine their God as such an arbitrary being. The sacred book afforded them many a support for this. The Koran has many parallels to the account of the hardening of Pharoah's heart, also many passages which in varying languages convey the thought that whom God wishes to guide, his heart he expands for Islam, and whom he desires to deceive, his breast he makes narrow, as if he wished to

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scale the heavens (Sura 6, v. 125). No soul can believe unless God decrees (Sura 10, v. 100). There is no single teaching for which the Koran allows such contradictory interpretations as this very question. In opposition to the many definite utterances of the prophet, there Avere brought forward many expressions in which it is not Allah who is represented as the deceiver, but Satan, the evil enemy and treacherous tempter (Sura 22, v. 4 ; 35, v. 5-6; 41, v. 36; 43, v. 35; 58, v. 20) since Adam (2, v. 34; 38, v. 83 ff). And he who wished to champion man's complete freedom of will, not even threatened by Satan, could find innumerable unequivocal passages in the same Koran from which the very opposite of the servum arbitrium can be inferred. Man's good and evil deeds are characteristically designated as his "acquisition," that is actions which he has secured through his own efforts (e. g., Sura 3, v. 24 et als). " W h a t they have acquired (of evil) lies on their hearts like r u s t " (Sura 83, v. 14). And even when it is a question of the "sealing up of the h e a r t , " this is made to agree with the thought that they "follow their inclination" (Sura 47, v. 15, 18). Desire leads man into sin (Sura 38, v. 25). God does not harden the hearts of sinners, but " t h e y become hard (through their own wickedness) . . . they are like a stone, or still h a r d e r " (Sura 2, v. 69). Satan himself rejects the imputation that he leads man astray; man errs (through himself) (Sura 50, v. 26). And the same conception is confirmed by historical examples. God says, for example, that he ' ' guided the wicked people of the Thamouds in the right path: And as to Thamoud, we had vouchsafed them guidance, but to guidance did they prefer blindness, wherefore the tempest of a shameful punishment overtook them for their doings. But we rescued the believing and the God-fearing" (Sura 41, v. 16). That i s : God had guided them, they did not follow; of their own free

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will they sinned against God's decree, they freely chose evil. God guides man into the path; but it depends on man whether he gratefully submits to the guidance or obstinately rejects it (Sura 76, v. 3). "Each man acts in his own w a y " (Sura 17, v. 86). "The truth is from your God, let him who will believe, and let him who will be infidel" (Sura 18, v. 28). "This truly is a warning: And whoso willeth, taketh the way to his L o r d " (Sura 76, v. 29). In this also God does not stand in the way of the wicked. He gives them the power and disposition to do evil, just as he grants the good the disposition, smooths the path to do good (Sura 92, v. 7, 10).

In this connection I should like to take the opportunity for a remark, which is not unimportant to the understanding of the problem of free-will in the Koran. Many of those expressions of Mohammed which are generally quoted to prove that it is God himself who is the cause of the sinfulness of man, and leads him into error, will appear in a different light if we consider more carefully the meaning of the word which is generally used to express this "leading astray." If, in many passages of the Koran it is said "Allah guides whom he will, and lets whom he will go astray," such passages do not imply that God directly brings the latter class into the evil path. The decisive word adalla is not to be taken in such a connection, as meaning to "lead astray," but to allow to go astray, not to trouble about a person, not to show him the way out. " W e let them (nadaruhum) wander in his disobedience" (Sura 6, v. 110). Let us conjure up the picture of a lonely wanderer in the desert,—it is from this idea that the language of the Koran concerning leading and wandering has sprung. The wanderer errs in a boundless expanse, gazing about for the right direction to his goal. So is man in his wanderings through life. He who, through faith and

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good works, has deserved the good will of God; him he rewards with his guidance. He lets the evil-doer go astray. He leaves him to his fate and takes his protection from him. He does not offer him the guiding hand, but he does not bring him directly to the evil path. For this reason the figure of blindness and groping about is often used for sinners. They do not see and must therefore wander without plan or goal. Since no leader comes to their aid, they fall irrevocably into destruction. '' Now have proofs that may be seen come to you from your Lord, whoso seeth them, the advantage will be his own: and whoso is blind to them, his own will be the loss" (Sura 6, v. 104). "Why did he not make use of the light offered him? "Assuredly we have sent down the Book to thee for man and for the ends of truth. Whoso shall be guided by it—it will be for his own advantage,—and whoso shall err, shall only err to his own loss" (Sura 39, v. 42). This abandoning of man to himself,—the withdrawal of God's care, is a prominent thought in the Koran with regard to those who because of their former life make themselves unworthy of divine grace. It is said of God that he forgets the wicked, because they forget him, the conclusion is consistently drawn that God forgets the sinner (Sura 7, v. 49; 9, v. 68; 45, v. 33), i. e., he does not concern himself with him. Guidance is a reward of the good. "Allah does not guide the wicked" (Sura 9, v. 110). He allows them to wander aimlessly. Unbelief is not the result, but the cause of straying (Sura 47, v. 9; especially 61, v. 5). Indeed, "Whom God leaves in error, he does not find the right path" (Sura 42, v. 45) and "whom he leaves in error that one has no leader" (Sura 40, v. 35) and goes headlong to destruction (Sura 7, v. 177). It is everywhere the withdrawal of grace as a punishment that is the cause of godlessness, and not the circumstance of being led astray. The early Moslems

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who stood close to the original points of view both realized and felt this. It is said in a Hadith, " T h e heart of him who contemptuously neglects three Friday services (tahawunan) is sealed by God." 1 By the sealing of the heart is understood a condition into which man falls only after the neglect of religious demands. An old prayer which the prophet taught Husein, the neophyte who embraced Islam, runs: " 0 , Allah, teach me my right path and guard me from the evils of my own soul," 2 i. e., do not leave me to my own devices, but extend to me a guiding hand. This is not a question of misleading. The feeling that to be abandoned to oneself is the direst kind of divine punishment is expressed in an ancient Moslem oath, " I f my declaration prove untrue (in cases of assertion), or if I do not keep my promise (in promissory oaths), then may God cut me off from his care and strength and leave me to my own care and strength," 3 i. e., may he withdraw his hand from me, so that I am obliged to see how I can get along, deprived of his guidance and help. It is in this sense that we are to understand the allowing of a sinner to go astray 4 —and not that he has been led astray. IV. We have seen that the Koran can be used in the defense of the most contradictory views in regard to one of the most important, fundamental questions of religious and ethical knowledge. Hubert Grimme, who has gone very deeply into the analysis of the theology of the Koran, has found a view which can help us out of this confusion. He thinks that the contradictory teachings which Mohammed gave concerning the freedom of the will and the choice of grace, belong to different epochs of his life and correspond to the impressions made upon him by his environment and experiences of the time. In the first Meccan period he takes the standpoint of complete freedom of will and responsibility. In Medina, however, he tends more and more to the teaching of the lack

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of freedom and of the servum arbitrium. The crassest teachings on this subject appear toward the close of his life. 1 Provided the chronological order could be surely carried out, this view could serve as a guide for those who can consider it historically. "We cannot, however, expect this from the early Moslems, who had to thread their way through the contradictory teachings, to declare themselves for one or another of the conflicting views and to evolve some sort of harmony out of the opposing opinions. The attitude of dependence which is prominent in the whole of the Moslem system was undoubtedly favorable to the denial of the freedom of the will. Virtue and iniquity, reward and punishment, should be entirely dependent on God's gracious choice. Man's will was not to be considered. Yery early, however (we can trace the movement to about the end of the seventh century), such a tyrannical conception disturbed the pious mind, which could not rest content with the unjust God implied in the current point of view. External influences also contributed to the rise and growing confirmation of the pious views. The earliest protest against unlimited predestination finds its home in Syrian Islam. Kremer 2 forcibly points out the fact, that the early Moslem teachers were incited by their Christian theological environment to question unbounded determinism. For already in the Eastern Church the disputes over this point were absorbing the attention of the theologians. Damascus, the seat of Moslem learning at the time of the Omayyad caliphate, became the centre of the discussion of kadar, fatalism, and from here it was rapidly disseminated. Pious views were put forward to establish the contention that man in his ethical and legal acts cannot be the slave of an unchangeable predestination, but rather that he is himself the author of his own acts and so

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becomes the cause of his salvation or his condemnation. The motto of these people later became khalk al-afal— creation of acts. Because they limited the scope of kadar they came to be known as Kadarites, on the principle of lucus a non lucendo. On the other hand they called their opponents "people of blind compulsion" (,jabr) Jabarites. This was the earliest dogmatic dissention within ancient Islam. Although the Koran could supply both parties with arguments, still a mythological tradition, which either developed very early as a kind of hagada in Islam, or perhaps first appeared in the course of these disputes,— exact dates cannot be furnished—favored the determinists. According to this, immediately after the creation of Adam, God took from his bodily substance,—imagined as gigantic,—all his descendants in the form of small ants, and at that early time, determined the classes of the blessed and the damned, and incorporated them in the right and left side of the body of the first man. An angel appointed for this special task indicates for each Separate embryo the whole fate of his life (according to an expression borrowed from India: "written on his f o r e h e a d " ) 3 ; among other things whether he is destined to be saved or condemned. The corresponding eschatological tradition was also developed from the standpoint of determinism. God sends the poor sinner quite arbitrarily to Hell. The "intercession" attributed to the prophet is the only mitigating element here. The representations on which were based such conceptions, were f a r too deeply rooted in the popular mind, for the very contradictory teachings of the Kadarites, emphasizing free choice and full responsibility, to gain many adherents. The Kadarites defended themselves with difficulty against the attacks and opposition of the opponents who brought forward the old interpretations of the sacred text and the popular fables mentioned

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above. The Kadarite movement is of great importance in the history of Islam, as the oldest effort to free itself from inherited and prevailing conceptions, not, indeed, in the interest of freedom of thought, but in the interest of the demands of the pious mind. It is not the note of protest of the intellect against pedantic dogma which sounds from the mouth of Kadarites, but the voice of the religious conscience, protesting against an unworthy representation of God and his relations to the religious impulses of hit servants. A number of traditional sayings invented to belittle them, show what opposition these tendencies encountered, how little sympathy the Kadarite ways of thought secured. As in other cases, here also an effort is made to base the general orthodox feeling on the teaching of the prophet himself. They were the magi of the Moslem community. As the followers of Zoroaster account for evil by opposing a principle of evil to the creator of the good, so the Moslems eliminate the evil deeds of man from the sphere of Allah's creation. I t is not God, but the autonomous will of man who creates disobedience. The efforts of the Kadarites to prove their thesis by alleged disputes between Mohammed and 'All are sharply condemned and every possible abuse and contumely are hurled at their heads.3 Another remarkable fact appears here. Even the rulers in Damascus, who ordinarily showed very little interest in dogmatic questions, were greatly annoyed by the Kadarite movement spreading in Syrian Islam. They sometimes took an outspoken stand against those who advocated the freedom of the will.4 These declarations of opinion by the rulers who were busy with the great work of building up a new state, did not perhaps find their motive in aversion to theological wrangling. To be sure, men who are struggling with

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extensive plans for the development of a state, and had to fight enemies of the dynasty on all sides, must have found it quite disagreeable to have the minds of the masses aroused by subtleties over the freedom of the will and self-determinism. Strong dominating personalities are not apt to be pleased with the reasoning of the masses. There was a deeper reason for the Omayyads to foresee a danger in the weakening of the dogma of fatalism,—not a danger to faith, but to their own politics. They knew perfectly well that their dynasty was a thorn in the flesh of the pious, of those very men who, on account of their piety, possessed the hearts of the common people. They knew very well that to many of their subjects they were usurpers who had seized the reins of government by tyrannical force and were looked upon as enemies of the prophet's family, murderers of holy persons, profaners of the sacred places. There was one belief which was best fitted to restrain the people and prevent a movement against them and their representatives,—the belief in fate. God had decided from all eternity that these people should reign, and all their deeds were absolutely decreed by fate. It was very acceptable to them to have such views take hold of the people. They listened with pleasure when their poets praised them in terms which recognized their rule as willed by God, as a decretum divinum. The faithful could not resist this. The poets of the Omayyad caliphs, therefore, praised their princes as rulers: "whose rule was foreordained by the eternal decree of God." 5 When the acts of the rulers appeared tyrannical and unjust, this dogma served to satisfy the people, as well as to legitimatize the dynasty. The submissive subjects should regard "the Emir-al-mu' minin and his oppressive acts in the light of fate, whose acts no one should criti-

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cise. " These are the words of a poet of the gruesome deeds of an Omayyad prince, and follow them as an echo. The belief was to take root that all acts must necessarily occur as decreed by Grod, and it was impossible for the will of man to prevent them. '' These Kings'' according to some of the older Kadarites, "shed the blood of the true believers, unjustly seize the goods of others, and claim, ' our deeds spring from kadar.' ' '7 The Omayyad caliph 'Abdalmalik, who confirmed himself in power after a severe struggle, locked one of his rivals in his palace and murdered him with the approval of his "palace" priest. He then had the head of the murdered man thrown into the crowd of followers of his victim, who were awaiting his return before the palace. The caliph sent word to them: " T h e prince of the faithful has killed your lord, as it was ordained in the eternal destiny of fate and in the unchangeable divine decree . . . " Thus runs the tale. Naturally it was impossible to resist the divine decree of which the caliph was the only instrument. Everyone acquiesced and did homage to the murderer of the man, whom but a short time before, they had considered a true believer. Even though this may not be implicitly accepted as history, it can nevertheless testify to the connection claimed between the acts of the government and inevitable fate. I must not, indeed, omit the fact that the appeal to the divine decree was accompanied by a number of dirhems, which were to mitigate the horror of the spectators at the sight of the head of 'Amr ibn Sa'id which was thrown into the crowd.8 6

The Kadarite movement during the Omayyad dynasty is the first stage on the way to a weakening of universal Mohammedan orthodoxy. This is its greatest historical service, even though this was not contemplated by it. This significance of the movement must justify me in

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discussing its various aspects at such length in this lecture. Soon, however, the breach which had now been made in the customary naive belief of the people, was to widen and be spread over a wider area by the criticisms of the usual forms of belief, in so f a r as this was made possible by intellectual and spiritual growth. V. In the meantime the Moslem world had become acquainted with Aristotle's philosophy which greatly affected the religious thought of many of the learned. However much the effort was made to reconcile the religious traditions with the newly acquired tenets of philosophy, Islam was threatened with immeasurable danger. But in certain points it seemed almost impossible to connect Aristotle, even in his Neo-Platonic garb, with the premises of Moslem faith. Belief in the .creation of the world in time, in special providence, and in miracles, was not to be vindicated by Aristotle's philosophy. In order to preserve Islam and its tradition for the chosen, however, there developed a new speculative system, known in the history of philosophy as halam and whose advocates are called Mutakallimun. At its origin the word mutalcallim—literally 'speaker'—was used to indicate one who takes up some dogma or dogmatic problem, and adduces speculative proofs for his contentions. Accordingly mutakallim entails as a supplement the special question with which the speculative activity of the theologian is concerned. F o r example any one who discusses those questions raised by the M u r j i ' would be called: " m i n al-mutakallimina ii-l-irja." 1 The term, however, is soon expanded to designate those " w h o take up the doctrines which are accepted in religious beliefs as truths not to be subjected to discussion, and make them objects of discussion and argument, and formulate them so that they may become plausible to thinking minds." Speculative activity in this direction then received the name of halam (speech, oral discus-

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sion). According to its tendency of serving as a support of religious teachings, kalam passed from the anti Aristotelian premises, and came to mean, in the true sense of the word, a philosophy of religion. Its oldest adherents are called Mu' tasilites. This word indicates "those who separate themselves." It is not necessary to repeat the fable generally cited in explanation of the motive for this appellation, it is sufficient to accept as the right explanation of it the fact that the origin of this party lay in pious impulses. It was pious, partly ascetic people, mu'tazila, i. e., "those who withdrew themselves''—ascetics2—who gave the first impetus to that movement, which through the accession of rationalistic circles came more and more into opposition to the predominating beliefs. In their final development only, do they justify the name of "freethinkers in Islam," a name given to them by the Zurich professor Heinrich Steiner, who was the first (1865) to write a monograph on this school.3 They start from religious motives like their predecessors, the old Kadarites. In their beginnings the Mu'tazila do not show the slightest tendency to free themselves from uncomfortable bonds, to break away from the strict orthodox conception of life. It is not a sign of great mental exaltation, that one of the first questions considered by the Mu'tazila and settled in their own mind is whether, in contradistinction to the Murji' conception, the commission of "major sins" constitutes essentially ha fir, and accordingly, liability to eternal punishment, to the same degree as does unbelief. It introduces into dogma the notion of a middle ground between the believer and the unbeliever,—strange subtleties for philosophical minds! Wasil ibn ' Ata, who, in the history of Islamic dogma, is called the founder of the Mu'tazila, is described as an ascetic by his biographers. In an elegy he is praised as

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one who " n e v e r touched either a dinar or a dirhem" 4 and his comrade also, 'Amr ibn 'Ubeid, is designated as an ascetic (zahid) who spent whole nights in prayer, performed the pilgrimage to Mecca forty times on foot, and always looked as mournful " a s if he had just come from the burial of his parents." There is extant a pious ascetic exhortation of his, very well written, directed to the Caliph al-Mansur, in which we notice nothing of a rationalistic tendency. 5 If the " c l a s s e s " of Mu'tazilites be examined, it will be found that for a considerable period 6 their asceticism holds an important place in the noted peculiarities of many of these people. In the religious points of view which their teachings especially advanced—the lessening of the omnipotence of God in favor of the demands of justice—there were indications of the beginnings of opposition to the currently accepted orthodoxy, many important considerations, which could easily attract even sceptics to their side. The connection with the kalam soon gives a rationalistic color to their modes of thought, and leads them more and more in the direction of rationalistic aims, the development of which on the part of the Mu'tazilites brings them into a steadily growing attitude of opposition to the general orthodoxy. In our final summary of them it will be found that they labor under the disadvantage of many unsympathetic traits. One service, however, they undoubtedly rendered. They were the first to broaden the religious sources of knowledge in Islam so as to embrace reason, 'akl, which had been until then strictly avoided in this religion. Some of their most distinguished adherents go so f a r as to say that " t h e first condition of knowledge is doubt." 7 " F i f t y doubts are better than one certainty," 8 and other expressions of this order. One could say of them that according to their method there was a sixth sense, the 'akl (reason 9 ). They made it the

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criterion in matters of belief. One of their older adherents, Bislir ibn al-Mu'tamir from Baghdad, in a didactic poem on natural history, preserved and commentated upon by his associate Jahiz, dedicates a true hymn of praise to reason: How beautiful is reason as an emissary and comrade in evil and good! As a judge who decides on that which is absent, as one judges that which is present; . . . . some of its deeds, that it decides between the good and the evil; Through the possession of powers which God has distinguished with unsullied holiness and purity. 10

Many of those who carried skepticism to the extreme, assigned to the testimony of our senses as low a place as possible among the criteria of knowledge. 11 At any rate they were the first in the theology of Islam to emphasize the right of Reason. In doing this, it is true, they radically strayed from their point of departure. In its highest point of development it characterizes a reckless criticism of those elements of the popular belief, which had long been regarded as an indispensable p a r t of orthodox confession. They caviled at the rhetorical inaccessibility of the terms of the Koran, at the authenticity of the Hadith, in which the documents of popular belief take shape. Their negation directed itself especially within this system, against the mythological elements of eschatology. The accounts of the Sirat-bridge, as fine as a hair and as sharp as a sword, over which the faithful pass into paradise with the swiftness of lightning, while those destined to condemnation, in attempting to pass with uncertain steps, fall into the yawning abyss of hell; of the waves on which the deeds of men are tossed; and many other such presentations are elimi-

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nated by them from the group of obligatory beliefs, and explained allegorically. The predominating view which guided them in their religious philosophy was the purification of the monotheistic conception of God from all obscurity and disfigurement to which it had been subjected in the traditional popular belief, especially in two directions,—the ethical and the metaphysical. All representations which are derogatory to the belief in his justice must be discarded. The God idea must be purified of all representations which could obscure his absolute unity, singleness and unchangeableness. They nevertheless cling to the idea of the creative, active, foreseeing God and protest strongly against the Aristotelian idea of God. The Aristotelian teachings concerning the eternity of the world, the confession of the inviolability of the laws of nature, the rejection of a providence which reaches to the individual, are divisions which differentiate these rationalistic Islamic theologians with all the freedom of their speculative activity, from the followers of the Stagirite. On account of the inadequate proofs which they advanced, they had to bear the scorn and the sarcastic criticism of the philosophers, who would neither recognize them as equal opponents, nor their method of thought as worthy of consideration. 12 The reflection could justifiably be made on their course of action, that philosophical independence and the lack of an hypothesis were quite foreign to them; for they are fettered by a positive religion for whose purification they wished to work through intellectual methods. As has already been mentioned, this work of purification has been applied especially to two themes,—divine justice and divine unity. Every Mu'tazilite handbook consists of two groups,—the one is embraced in the "chapter of justice," the other " t h a t of the confession of unity." This division determines the character of all

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Mu'tazilite theological literature. Because of this trend in their religious philosophical efforts, they have given themselves the name of "people of justice and of the confession of unity." In the historical sequence in which these questions appear, the question of justice takes the first place. They attach themselves directly to the propositions of the Kadarites, which are further developed by the Mu'tazilites. They start from the claim that man has unlimited freedom of will in his deeds, that he himself is creator of his actions. Otherwise it would be unjust for God to hold him responsible. In the conclusion drawn from this fundamental idea, set up as an axiom, they go farther than the Kadarites. While inscribing on their banners the dogma of man's free will, and rejecting the idea of God's arbitrariness, they further maintain in connection with the conception of God that he is necessarily just. The notion of justice is not to be separated from the conception of God. No act of God can be thought of which does not correspond to the terms of justice. God's universal power has one limit and that is in the demands of justice, from which it cannot escape, which it cannot remove. Through this method of reasoning, there is introduced into the conception of God an idea that was quite foreign to ancient Islam, that of necessity. There are things in relation to God which are designated as necessity. God must, is an assertion which from the point of view of ancient Islam would have appeared as a striking absurdity, if not indeed as blasphemy. Since God created man with a view to happiness, he was obliged to send prophets to teach the ways and means of attaining happiness. This was not the result of his sovereign will, a divine gift which his absolute independent will could have withheld; it was a necessary act of the divine good-will. He could not be conceived as a being whose deeds are good, unless he had given mankind a chance to be guided.

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He had to reveal himself through prophets. He himself admitted this necessity in the Koran. " I t rests upon Allah (it is his obligation) to lead into the right path,"— so they explain Sura 16, v. 9.13 By the side of this conception of necessity, another very closely affiliated with it is introduced into the conception of God, namely that of utility. God's decrees contemplate the good of man, and this again by virtue of necessity. Man can freely accept or reject these teachings, revealed for his own good. But the just God must reward the good and punish the evil. The orthodox fancy concerning his arbitrary wish to people paradise and hell according to his caprice, and the harsh fact that virtue and obedience offered no guarantee to the just for future reward, were eliminated through an opportunism whose implications God necessarily fulfills. They emphasize the law of compensation which becomes another limit to God's arbitrariness, as set up by orthodox conception. The just, who suffer undeserved trouble and pain here on earth, in as much as God necessarily appears to them as useful and beneficial, must be recompensed in the other world. In itself this was nothing particularly characteristic. By a modification of the critical little word " m u s t " it was made to accord with an orthodox postulate. But many of the Mu'tazilites applied this postulate not only to true believers, or to innocent children, who have been subjected to undeserved pain and suffering here on earth, but also to animals. Animals must be recompensed in another existence for the suffering which the selfishness and cruelty of man imposes upon them here. Otherwise God is not just. We thus obtain, as it were, a transcendental protection of animals—an instance of the consistency with which they carry out their doctrine of the justice of God and how, in the last resort they set up in opposition to man free in his choice, a God who in a certain sense

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lacks freedom. Closely affiliated with this view is another conception in the domain of ethics. To the question, what f r o m an ethical religions point of view is good and what is evil, or according to theological terminology, what is beautiful and what ugly, the orthodox answers: the ' ' good-beautiful'' is what God commands; the '' evilu g l y " is what God forbids. The absolute divine will and its decrees are the measure of good and evil. There is nothing inherently good, or inherently evil. Murder is to be condemned because God has forbidden it. It would not be evil if divine law had not stamped it as such. Not so the Mu'tazilite. F o r him there is absolute good and absolute evil, and reason offers the measure for this judgment. This is the premise and not the divine will. A thing is not good because God has commanded it, but God has ordained it because it is good. If we could change these definitions of the theologians' of B a s r a and Baghdad into modern terms, would it not amount to this; that God is bound in his giving of laws by the CATEGORICAL, IMPERATIVE !

YI. We are thus confronted with a series of ideas and fundamental principles which are well adapted to show that the opposition of the Mu'tazilites to the simple beliefs of orthodoxy, is concerned not only with metaphysical questions, but that the conclusions drawn by them enter deeply into fundamental ethical conceptions, and in positive Islam are of decisive importance in views concerning divine legislation. But they had much more to accomplish in the other field, which forms the object of their rationalistic religious philosophy, namely in the field of the monotheistic idea. Within this field they first had to clear away a lot of rubbish which had obscured the purity of the idea. I n the first place they strove to efface the anthropomorphic conceptions of traditional orthodoxy, as incompatible with a worthy view of God. Orthodoxy would not listen to

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any but the literal interpretation of the anthropomorphic and anthropopathic expressions of the K o r a n and of traditional texts. God's seeing, hearing, anger, smile, his rising and sitting, even his hands, feet and ears, which are mentioned so often in the K o r a n and other texts, were to be taken in a literal sense. The Hanbalite school contended especially for this primitive conception of God. I t was Sunna to them. A t most these old believers were willing to confess that while clinging to the literal interpretation of the text, they were unable to specify how these conceptions were to be actually thought out. They demand blind belief in the literalness of the text bila keif "without a h o w , " whence this point of view is known as balkafa. To determine f u r t h e r the reason why is beyond the grasp of human powers, and men should not meddle with things which transcend the range of human thought. The names of some of the older exegetes are preserved, by whom the assertion that God was "flesh and blood," and that he had limbs, was regarded as a correct statement. I t is sufficient to add that these were not by any means to be thought of as like those of man, according to the word of the K o r a n : " T h e r e is nothing like unto him, and he is the hearing and seeing o n e " (Sura 42, v. 9). But one cannot imagine anything as actually existing, which has not substantiality. The conception of God as a purely spiritual being appears as atheism to these people. To be sure the Islamic anthropomorphists have sometimes carried this conception to a degree incredibly coarse. Let me mention here certain facts f r o m later times, in order to give an idea of how unrestrained such views must have been at a time when no spiritual opposition had yet mitigated them. The example of an Andalusian theologian will show the excesses which were possible in this field. A very famous theologian f r o m Majorca, who died in Baghdad about 524/1130, Muham-

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med ibn 8a'dun, known by the name Abu 'Amir al~ Kurashi, went so f a r as to offer the following explanation of the verse of the Koran to which the heretics referred: " 'There is nothing like unto him (God).' This means only that nothing can be compared to him in his divine essence; but as regards form, he is like you and me. That is to be taken much as the Koran verse, in which God calls upon the wives of the prophet, 'Oh, wives of the prophet, ye are not as other women' (Sura 33, v. 32), i. e., other women are on a lower plane of virtue, but in form they are exactly like you." One must confess that there is considerable blasphemy in this orthodox hermeneutics. The same authority did not recoil from the most extreme consequences. On one occasion he read the Koran verse (Sura 68, v. 42), which says of the last judgment day: " O n the day when the thigh shall be bared, and they shall be called to worship.'' And in order to refute as energetically as possible any metaphorical explanation of this sentence, Abu 'Amir slapped his own thigh and said: " a true thigh, one just like this one." 1 Similarly, two centuries later, the famous Hanbalite Sheikh Taki al-din ibn Teymiyya (d. 728/1328) in Damascus, in a lecture is said to have quoted one of those texts, in which the "descending" of God is mentioned. In order to get rid of any doubt and to illustrate his conception of the rising of God ad oculos, the Sheikh descended a few steps of the pulpit saying: " j u s t as I descend here." Such is the outcome of the old anthropomorphic tendency, against which the Mu'tazilites first took up arms in the religious field, by spiritualizing, from the point of view of the purity and worth of the Islamic conception of God, all those anthropomorphic expressions of the sacred text, through the medium of a metaphorical interpretation. These efforts resulted in a new method of Koranic exegesis, to which was given the old name ta'wil

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in the sense of figurative interpretation, an exegetical trend, against which the Hanbalites at all times protested. 2 In the ease of traditions they could resort to the method of rejecting as false, texts which reflected a too crude anthropomorphic representation, or gave rise to such. In this way Islam was to be freed from a whole mass of foolish fables, which, favored by the greed for fables in the popular circles, had been piled up in the field of eschatology, and in the form of hadlths had received religious sanction. From a dogmatic point of view nothing has been so strongly stressed by the orthodox, as the conception founded on the words of the Koran, Sura 75, v. 23, that the just should see God bodily in the other world. This the Mu'tazilites could not accept. They were little impressed by the fine definitions, refusing every ta'wil, which finds this idea of 4 sight' in the tradition: " a s you see the bright moon in the firmament."3 The material vision of God—an idea from which the Mu'tazilites eliminated the direct literal sense by a spiritual explanation of the phrase—continued to be a real apple of discord between them and such theologians as were imbued with their ideas, and the orthodox, clinging to the old tradition, with whom the conciliatory rationalists united in this question. Of these more will be said in the course of this chapter. VII. In phases of the problem involved in the question of tauhld, the confession of unity, the Mu'tazilites passed on to a still higher general point of view, raising in a very comprehensive manner the question of the divine attributes. Is it possible to ascribe attributes to God without disturbing the belief in his individual unchanging unity? The answer to this question called forth a great expenditure of hairsplitting dialectic on the part of the various Mu'tazilite schools themselves,—for they offer

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110 definite unity in the various definitions of their dogmas,—and also on the part of those who tried to mediate between the orthodox point of view and their own. F o r we must anticipate here—to which we will later return—that from the beginning of the tenth century conciliatory tradition arose which poured a few drops of rationalism into the oil of orthodoxy, in order to save the old formulas from the unfettered rational views. The formulations of the orthodox dogmas attenuated by a few rationalistic phrases, which in their essence signify a return to traditional orthodoxy, are linked with the names of Abu-l-Hasan al-Ash'art (d. in Baghdad 324/935) and Abu Mansur al-Maturidi (d. in Samarkand 333/944). While the system of the former holds sway in the central provinces of Islamic territory, that of the latter gained its hold in the wider east, in Central Asia. There are no essential differences between the two tendencies. I t is mostly a question of minor quarrels over words, of whose extent we can get an idea if we look at the following questions of difference as examples: The question should a Moslem use the mode of speech, " I am a true believer, so please God," was decided by the followers of al-Ash'ari and Maturidl in a contradictory manner, each one substantiating his views by a dozen subtle theological arguments. In general the point of view of the Maturidl is freer than that of their Ash'arite colleagues. They are a shade nearer the Mu'tazilites than the Ash'arites. Let us take as an example the various answers given to the question: "what is the basis of the obligation to know G o d ? " The Mu'tazilites answer: " R e a s o n " ; the Ash'arites: "because it is written one must recognize G o d " ; the Maturidi: " T h e obligation to confess God is based on the divine command, which is grasped by reason; reason is not the source, but the instrument of the conception of God."

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This example gives us a good idea of the whole scholastic method of dogmatic strife in Islam. In the further hairsplitting definition regarding homousia and homoiousia, extending even to single letters, we are reminded of the minute verbal disputes of the Byzantine theologians. Can we impute attributes to God? T o do so would bring about a division in the essential unity of God. If one thinks of an attribute, as one naturally does in relation to God, as not separate f r o m his essence,—not added to it but inherent in it f r o m eternity, there would follow f r o m the simple predication of such eternal entities, even though belonging to the essence of God and inseparable f r o m it, the admission of an eternal essence by the side of an eternal God. B u t this would be shirk, i. e., association of something with God. The postulate of the tauhld, of the pure confession of unity, involves the rejection of attributes in God, whether of eternal inherent attributes or such as are added to his being. This method of reasoning led necessarily to the denial of attributes. God cannot be omniscient through Knowledge, nor omnipotent through Power, nor existing through a Life. There is no separate knowledge, power and life in God. A l l things which appear to us as attributes are inseparably one, and not different f r o m God himself. " G o d is k n o w i n g " is nothing else than that " G o d is p o w e r f u l , " and " G o d is l o v i n g , " and if we increased these expressions indefinitely, we would nevertheless assert nothing more than that GOD IS. There is no doubt that such considerations served to place the monotheistic idea of Islam in a purer light than was possible in the obscuring of the idea through popular beliefs that cling to the letter. B u t to the orthodox this purification necessarily appeared as ta'til, i. e., robbing the conception of God of its content, a genuine kenosis.

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An orthodox of the old school who flourished when this dogmatic strife was at its beginning naively characterizes the thesis of his rationalistic opponents by the statement: " T h e arguments of these people result in having no God in heaven." The absolute is not accessible, not knowable. If God is to be identified with his attributes conceived as a unity, then one could pray: "Oh, knowledge, have pity upon m e ! " And furthermore, the rejection of the attributes constantly clashes with the clear Koranic sayings, which speak of God's wisdom, his power, etc. These attributes, therefore, can, indeed must, be predicated of him. To deny them is undisguised error, unbelief and heresy. It was now the task of the intermediary to reconcile the rigid denial of the rationalists with the old conception of attributes through acceptable formulas. The people who wander in al-Ash'ari's intermediary paths, found the formula: God knows through a knowledge which is not separate from his essence; the supplementary clause was intended to dogmatically save the possibility of attributes. But we are far from being through with the hairsplitting formulas. The Maturldis also strive to erect a connecting bridge between the orthodox and the Mu'tazilites, while accepting in a general way the agnostic formulation that there are attributes in God for they are set forth in the Koran, but that it is impossible to say either that they are identical with God, or that they are separate from God; nevertheless the Ash'aritic conception of the doctrine of attributes appeared to some of them as a formula derogatory to the deity. God is knowing through his eternal knowledge. Does not the expression 'through' give the impression of something instrumental? Is not the knowledge, the power, the will of God, all those divine energies which form the complete fullness of his essence, made manifest immediately, and if so is not this conception of

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an immediate manifestation offset by the little syllable hi (through), which in speech has the function of an instrumental particle? I n their dread of grammatically belittling the majesty of God, the sheikhs of Samarkand resort to the subtle method of expressing the intermediary formula t h u s : ' ' He is knowing and has knowledge, which is attributed to him in the sense of eternity, etc." I t is evident t h a t the Islamic theologians in Syria and Mesopotamia did not live in vain in the neighborhood of the dialecticians of the conquered nations. V I I I . The conception of the "Word of God formed one of the most serious objects of this dogmatic strife. How is it to be understood that the attribute of speech is to be ascribed to God, and how is the activity of this attribute to be explained through the revelation embodied in the sacred writings? Although these questions belong to the doctrine of attributes, they are nevertheless treated separately as an independent bit of dogmatic speculation, and at an early period formed an object of dispute independent of the connection with the question of attributes. Orthodoxy answers such questions as follows: ' ' Speech is an eternal attribute of God. As such, like his knowledge, his power and other traits of his eternal essence, it had no beginning and was never interrupted. According to this, that which is to be recognized as the activity of a speaking God, his revelation,-—primarily in Islam, the Koran,—did not arise within time, through a special creative act of the will of God, but is f r o m eternity. The K o r a n is uncreated,—an orthodox dogma maintained up till the present time. According to this, it is naturally to be expected that the Mu'tazilites will discover here also a breach of monotheistic purism. I n the anthropomorphic attribute indicated by the expression " t h e speaking o n e " ascribed to God, equivalent to the recognition of an eternal being

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beside God, tliey saw nothing less than the negation of the unity of the divine being. I n this case the opposition gained in popularity, since it does not (as in the ordinary questions of attributes) merely treat of abstract things, but moves something that is entirely concrete into the foreground of speculation. Separated f r o m the strife over attributes, in which it had its origin, the burden of the question resolves itself into this f o r m u l a : " I s the K o r a n created, or u n c r e a t e d ? " This formulation of the question was bound to arouse the interest of even the most ordinary Moslem, despite the fact that the answer involves a series of considerations to which he would be entirely indifferent. The Mu'tazilites conceived f o r the explanation of the "speaking G o d " a very remarkable mechanical theory, which as it were carried them f r o m " t h e f r y i n g p a n into the fire." I t cannot be the voice of God which manifests itself to the prophet, Avhen he feels God's revelation working in him through his organs of hearing. I t is a created sound. When God desires to declare himself phonetically, he does it by a special act of creation, and communicates speech through a material substratum. This the prophet hears. I t is not the immediate speech of God but something created by him, manifesting itself indirectly, and corresponding to the will of God in its content. This view provided the f o r m f o r their theme of the " c r e a t e d K o r a n , " which they opposed to the orthodox dogma of the "eternal, uncreated word of God." Over none of the Mu'tazilite innovations did such a violent strife rage as over this,—a strife which passed beyond scholastic bounds and made itself felt in everyday life. The caliph Ma'mun espoused the cause, and as the chief priest of the state he decreed, with threats of severe punishment, the acceptance of the belief in the creation of the Koran. His successor Mu'tasim followed

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in Ms steps, and the orthodox theologians, and those who declined to take sides, were subjected to tortures, vexations, and imprisonment. Willing Kadis and other officers of religion took upon themselves the office of inquisitors, in order to annoy and persecute the unyielding adherents of the orthodox formula, and also those who did not declare themselves decisively enough for the only saving belief in the creation of the Koran. An American scholar, Walter M. Patton, has set forth in an admirable work, published in 1897, the course of this rationalistic inquisitorial movement as illustrated by a thorough study of the fate of the man, whose name has become the rallying cry of Moslem rigorism, the Imam Ahmed ibn Hanbal.1 I have said elsewhere and can repeat it here: ' ' The Inquisitors of liberalism went if possible, to greater extremes than their brothers who clung to the letter. At all events their fanaticism is more repulsive than that of their imprisoned and illtreated victims." 2 It was not until the time of the Caliph Mutawakkil, a repulsive reactionary who knew well how to combine a life of debauch and the patronage of obscene literature with dogmatic orthodoxy, that the adherents of the old dogma were able to again raise their heads. F r o m being persecuted they now become the persecutors, and they know well how to turn the old principle derived from experience " v a e victis" to the greater glory of Allah. This was the time of political decline,—the time which has ever been the harvest season for the foes of enlightenment. The dogma of the uncreated Koran continues to spread. One is no longer satisfied with a general formulation of the dogma, indefinite in its statement, that the Koran is eternal and uncreated. What is the uncreated Koran? Is it the thought of God, the will of God, which finds its expression in this book? Is it the definite text, which God has imparted to the prophet,

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" i n distinct Arabic language without any obscurity!" In the course of time orthodoxy became very aggressive in the contention that " t h a t which is between the two covers is the word of God, therefore the conception of the uncreated includes also the manuscript copy of the Koran with its letters formed in ink and written on paper. And that also which is " r e a d aloud at the prayers," that is, the daily Koran recitation, as it proceeds from the mouth of the faithful, is not different from the eternal, uncreated word of God. At this point the intermediary Ash'arites and Maturidis made a few concessions dictated by reason. Al-Ash'ari had advanced the theme in considering the main question: God's speech (kalam) is eternal; but this refers only to spiritual speech (kalam nafsi) as an eternal attribute of God, which has had no beginning, nor has ever been interrupted. On the other hand the revelation made to the prophets as well as other forms of manifestation of the divine word, were in each case the expression of the eternal, unceasing speech of God.3 He applies this notion to every material manifestation of revelation. Let us hear what Maturidi says of the view of those desiring to find a middle way in these questions: '' When it is asked: What is that which is written in the copy of the Koran? we say: ' I t is the word of God; therefore also that which is recited in the mosque and which issues from the mouth (organs of speech) is the word of God; but the (written) letters and the sound, the melodies and the voices are created things.' This limitation is advanced by the sheikhs of Samarkand. The Ash'arites, however, say: 'That which appears written in the copy of the Koran is not the word of God, but a communication of this word, a narration of that which is the word of God.' They therefore hold the burning of certain parts of a written copy of the Koran as permissible since it is not in itself the word of God. They base

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this on the fact that the word of God is his attribute. His attribute cannot be separated from him in manifestation. Therefore what appears in a separated form, as the content of a written page, cannot be regarded as the word of God. But we (the Maturidis) say to t h a t : 'this assertion of the Ash'arites is much more inane, than that of the Mu'tazilites.' " From this it can be seen, that those taking a middle ground do not agree among themselves. Orthodoxy is much more consistent in extending indefinitely the circle included in the doctrine of the uncreated word of God. The formula " m y utterance of the Koran is created" became an arch heresy to them. A pious man like Bukhari, whose canon of tradition is to the true believer the next holiest book to the Koran, was exposed to annoyances because he considered such formulas admissible. 4 Al-Ash'ari himself, to whose followers as we have already seen, is ascribed a slightly freer tendency in the definition of the word of God, did not sustain his rationalistic formulas. In the last definite statement of his belief he speaks thus: The Koran is on the well-guarded (heavenly) scroll, it is in the breast of him to whom knowledge is given; it is read by the tongue, it is written in books forsooth, it is recited by our tongues forsooth; it is heard by us forsooth, as it is written. " A n d when an idolator comes to you for protection, offer him protection that he may hear the word of God" (Sura 9, v. 6), what you say to him are therefore God's own words. That is to say: All this is identical in essence with the word of God written on the heavenly scroll, which is uncreated, from eternity, in truth (fi-l-hakikat) ; not in a figurative sense, not in the sense that all this is a copy, a quotation, a communication of the heavenly original. No: all this is identical with the heavenly original; what is true of this, is true also of the local and temporal forms of phenomena apparently produced by man. 5

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IX. In view of this character of the Mu'tazilite movement, these students of the philosophy of religion may lay claim to the title of "Rationalists." We will not disparage this title. They have the merit of being the first in Islam to raise SEASON to the position of a RELIGIOUS SOURCE OF KNOWLEDGE; the first, indeed, to have undisguisedly recognized the use of scepticism as the first impetus to knowledge. Can they on this account be also called liberal? That title, indeed, must be denied them, since they are the real founders of dogmatism in Islam by virtue of their formulas which run contrary to the orthodox principle. He who seeks salvation must preserve faith only in these fixed formulas, and no others. They endeavored to harmonize (by their definitions) religion and reason; but they produced narrow, uncompromising formulas, which they opposed to the more elastic traditionalism of the old believers, and which they defended with tiresome disputations. Moreover, they were intolerant to the extreme. Dogmatism always embodies an innate tendency toward intolerance. When the Mu'tazilites were fortunate enough to have their teachings accepted as the dogma of the state during the rule of three 'Abbaside caliphs, these dogmas were maintained by the inquisition, by imprisonment and by terrorism, until a counter movement afforded opportunity to breathe freely again to those who believed they possessed in religion the substance of pious tradition, not the results of doubtful rationalistic theories. A few quotations will show the intolerant spirit of the Mu'tazilite theologians. " H e who is not a Mu'tazilite is not to be called a believer," is a definite expression of one of their teachings. This is a result of their general teaching to the effect that no one can be called a believer who does not fathom God " i n the way of speculation." According to this, the common people with

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their naive beliefs have no part with Moslems. There can be no belief without the operation of reason. The question ''takfIr-al-'awamm," "who shall be condemned as unorthodox of the people in general," is a standing formula in the Mu' tazilite science of religion. There are those who assert that a person should not perform his prayers behind a naive believer who does not reason, that would be equivalent to performing one's worship behind some godless heretic. A famous member of this school, Mu'ammar ibn 'Abbad, reckoned everyone unbelieving, who did not share his view of attributes and freedom of will. From the same point of view another pious Mu'tazilite, Abu-Musa al-Mazdar, whom we could regard as an example of the pietistic beginnings in this direction, declares his own views as the only ones which will insure salvation. One could, therefore, accuse Mm of upholding that only he and, at most three of his scholars, could enter into the paradise of the true believers. 1 It was indeed fortunate for Islam that the time during which the state favored such opinions was limited to those three caliphs. How f a r might not the Mu'tazilites have gone, if they had had the ruling power longer at their command to foster their views. The teachings of Hisham al-Futi, one of the most radical opponents of the acceptance of these views concerning the divine attributes and of fatalism, shows us from what point of view the subject was regarded. " H e considered it admissible, treacherously to kill those who opposed his teachings; secretly or openly to deprive them of their power,—as unbelievers their life and power were forfeit." 2 These are naturally only theories of the schoolroom, but these theories went so f a r as to advance the idea that the territories in which the Mu'tazilite faith did not rule, were to be regarded as hostile lands (dar al-harb). In place of the division of the world into seven

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climates the Moslem geography offers a more circumscribed division, viz., "those in Islamic lands and in hostile lands." 3 To the second category belong all the territories whose inhabitants in spite of the call (da'wa) which has come to them to confess Islam, remain unbelievers. It is the duty of the head of Islam to attack such territories. This is the Jihad, religious war, commanded in the Koran, one of the surest ways to martyrdom. Many a Mu'tazilite included in these "hostile lands," those lands which were not controlled by their formulas of dogma. They should be attacked with the sword, as in the case of unbelievers and heathens. 4 This is indeed a very energetic rationalism. Nevertheless we cannot praise as advocates of liberal and tolerant views, those whose teachings were the point of departure and soil of such fanaticism. Unfortunately, the historians of the virtues of the Mu'tazilites do not always think of this, and in many a casuistically phantastic description of a possible development of Islam the attempt is made to show how favorable it would have been for the unfolding of Islam, if the Mu'tazilites had obtained possession of the leading spiritual power. After what we have just heard, it would be difficult to believe this. "We must not deny, however, that the result of their activity was salutary. They are the ones who helped to procure the recognition of 'akl reason, in questions of belief. This is their undisputed, and far reaching service, which assures to them an important place in the history of the religion and culture of Islam. In spite of all difficulties and repudiations the claim of 'akl made its way to a greater or less degree as a result of their aggressiveness, even into orthodox Islam. It was no longer easy entirely to avoid it. X. Up to this point we have repeatedly mentioned the names of the two Imams Abu-l-Hasan al-Ash'ari and Abu Mansur al-Maturidl. These two men, the former

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in the heart of the caliphate, the latter in Central Asia, settled through mediating formulas the controversial questions of dogmatism,—formulas now recognized as doctrines of orthodox Islam. It is not worth while to enter into the minute points of difference between these two closely allied systems. The first system obtained historical importance. Its founder, himself a Mu'tazilite scholar,—legend speaks of a vision in which the prophet appeared to him and instigated this change,—suddenly became disloyal to his school, and openly returned to the bosom of orthodoxy. He and others of his school disseminated the same conciliatory formulas, of more or less orthodox stamp. Nevertheless, even these were unable to satisfy the taste of the old conservatives, and for a long time they could not find entrance into the public theological instruction. It was not until the famous Seljuk vizier, Nizam al-mulk, in the middle of the eleventh century, created public chairs for the new theological teachings, in his great schools at Nisabur and Baghdad, that the Ash'arite dogma became officially recognized and was taught in the system of orthodox theology. Its most famous advocates could receive appointments in the Nizam-institutions. I t was here that the victory of the Ash'arite school, warring on one side with the Mu'tazilites and on the other with intransigent orthodoxy, was determined. The activity of these places of teaching marks an important epoch, not only in the history of Moslem instruction, but also in that of Moslem dogmatism. Let us consider this movement more closely. In speaking of al-Ash'ari as one who took the middle way, this characterization of his theological trend does not extend to all questions of doctrine over which the controversy of contradictory interpretations arose in the Islamic world in the eighth and ninth centuries. I t is true he advances midway formulas also concerning the questions of the freedom of the will and the nature of

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the Koran. But the position which he takes in a question which concerns more deeply than any other the religious views of the masses, must be regarded as the most authoritative for the indication of his theological attitude. I refer to the definition of the idea of God in its relation to anthropomorphism. Indeed one cannot call his position in relation to this question conciliatory. Fortunately, we possess a compendium of the teachings of this greatest of dogmatic authorities in orthodox Islam, in which he presents his teachings in a positive form, as well as his polemical replies to the opposing opinions of the Mu'tazilites,— and it must be added, not without fanatical fury. This important treatise, 1 supposed to have been lost and which till lately has been known only through fragmentary quotations, has become accessible in the last few years through a complete edition published in Haidarabad. It is a treatise of fundamental importance for everyone who is interested in the history of Islamic dogmatics. In the introduction al-Ash'aii's relation to rationalism becomes doubtful: The religious position to which we adhere is the acceptance of the book of our God, of the Sunna of our prophet, and in addition, of that which has reached us concerning his companions and their successors and the Imams of tradition. In this we find our strong support. And we adhere to that which Abu'Abdallah Ahmed Muhammed ibn Hanbal (may God make his face to shine, and may he elevate his rank, and make rich his reward), teaches us and we oppose everything which his teaching opposes; for he is the most eminent Imam and the most perfect head; through him has Allah made clear the truth and taken away error, made clear the right way and put to naught the evil teachings of the heretic and the doubt of the doubter. May God have mercy upon him! He is the chief Imam and the exalted friend.

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At the very beginning, then, of his credo al Ash'ari declared himself a Hanbalite. This does not, to be sure, suggest a middle way. In fact when he takes up the anthropomorphic question, he pours the whole vial of his scorn upon the rationalists, who seek a figurative explanation for the sensuous words of the sacred texts. He does not stop with the severity of the orthodox dogmatisers, but turns to the philologists. God himself says that he has revealed the Koran " i n clear Arabic language"; it can then be understood only on the basis of the correct Arabic usage. But where in all the world, would any Arab have used the word " h a n d , " etc., for good-will, and have made use of all that artificial speech, which those rationalists wish to read into the clear text, in order to rob its contents of the conception of God? "Abu-l-Hasan 'All ibn Isma'il al-Ash'ari says: We seek right guidance through God, and in him do we find all that we need, and there is no might nor power, except with Allah, and it is on him that we call for aid. But this is what follows: When someone asks u s : 'Has God a face?' we answer: 'He has one,' and thus contradict wrong teaching, for it is written: 'The face of the Lord endures full of majesty and honor' (Sura 55, v. 27). And when someone else asks: 'Has God hands?' we answer: 'Indeed, for it is written: the hand of God is above their hands' (Sura 48, v. 10), furthermore, ' that which I have created with my two hands' (Sura 38, v. 74). And it is reported: 'God stroked Adam's back with his hand and brought forth from it the whole of the descendants of Adam.' And it is reported: 'God formed Adam with his hand, and formed the Garden of Eden with his hand, and planted therein the tree Tuba with his hand, and he wrote the Torah with his hand.' And it is written 'both his hands are stretched f o r t h ' (Sura 5, v. 69); and in the words of the prophet: 'both

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his hands are right hands.' Thus literally and not otherwise.'' I n order to avoid gross anthropomorphism, he adds the clause to his credo that by face, hand, foot, etc., in these cases we are not to understand human members, and that all this should be taken as bila keif, 'without questioning, "without a h o w " (see above). This does not smack of a middle way, it corresponds entirely to the old orthodoxy; nor does it represent a conciliatory position between Ibn Hanbal and the Mu'tazilites; on the contrary, as appears f r o m the introductory explanation of al Ash'arl, it is an unconditional surrender of the Mu'tazilite renegades to the views of the unbending Imam of the traditionalists and that of his successors. Because of his wide-spread concessions to the beliefs of the people, he forfeited for the Mohammedan people the important achievements of the Mu'tazilites. 2 F r o m his point of view the belief in magic, in witchcraft, not to mention the miracles of the saints, remains intact. All these things the Mu'tazilites had swept aside. XI. The conciliation, which forms an important element in the history of Islamic dogmatism and whose substance can be regarded as the basis of dogmatic precept, sanctioned by the CONSENSUS ( i j m a ' ) , is not to be coupled with the name of al A s h ' a r i himself, but with the school which bears his name. Even by deviation in the direction of orthodoxy, ' akl, reason, as a source of religious knowledge, could no longer be set aside. We have just seen that p a r t of al A s h ' a r i ' s confession, in which he expresses himself in a dignified manner concerning the sources of his religious knowledge. Nothing appears there as to the claims of reason, even as a subsidiary means to the knowledge of truth. The school is quite different. Although not so irreconcilable as the Mu'tazilites, still here the nazar, the speculative knowledge of God, is

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claimed for all the world, and taklld,—the simple, thoughtless traditional repetition,—is condemned. And in connection with this common claim, the authoritative leaders of the Ash' arite school, have in many points kept in line with the Mu'tazilites, and have remained true to a method, which as I have just shown, their Imam not only denounced, dogmatically, but also stormed with arrows which he had drawn from the quiver of philology. The Ash'arite theologians have payed little attention to the protests of the master, and have made great use of the method of ta'wil (see above). In no other way could they avoid tajsim,—anthropomorphism. The claim that the Ash'arite and Hanbalite conclusions are the same, was quite impossible of proof. But what would al Ash' a r i have said to that method which now continued to extend its influence in the orthodox trend of the ta'wil? All the tricks of an unnatural hermeneutics were brought into action in order to eliminate f r o m the Koran and tradition the anthropomorphic expression,—we can use no other word. As f a r as the Koran was concerned, the Mu'tazilites had already sufficiently completed the necessary work. They cared less about tradition. In this regard they found an easy way out of the difficulty arising out of utterances in which there were objectionable expressions, by explaining them as spurious, and so not troubling themselves in the least about their reasonable interpretation. In this effort, however, orthodox theology could not participate, and the emphasis in its exegesis is principally placed on traditional texts. And how widespread had anthropomorphism become, even within the narrow limits of Hadith! As a proof the following may be instanced taken from the collection of traditions of Ahmed ibn Hanbal. One morning the prophet appeared among his companions with a very happy expression on his face. When he was asked the reason of his happy

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mood, he answered, "Why should I not be happy? Last night the most Sublime appeared to me in the most beautiful form imaginable, and called to me with the question, 'Over what dost thou think the heavenly community is now disputing?'1 When I had answered for the third time that I could not know, he laid his two hands on my shoulders, so that their coolness penetrated even to my breast, and it was revealed to me, what is in heaven and what is on earth." Then follow declarations about the theological discussions of the heavenly company.2 It would indeed have been a useless undertaking to remove such crass anthropomorphism by means of exegesis, and, besides, the rationalistic theologians did not feel themselves at all called upon to consider a text which, like the one we have just cited, had not been included in the canonical collection. Their responsibility is greater toward the texts which are to be found in the canon, and therefore are recognized by the whole community of true believers as authoritative. On these they used their arts. The following occurs in the influential collection of Malik ibn Anas: '' Every night our God descends to the lowest heaven (there are seven), when a third of the night is still left, and says: 'Who has a request to make of me, that I may grant it; who a wish, that I may fulfill it; who cries to me for forgiveness of sins, that I may forgive them?' " 3 This anthropomorphism is now disposed of by a grammatical artifice, which is made possible by the peculiarity of the ancient Arabic consonantal writing in which the vowels are not written. Instead of yanzilu,1 "he descends," they read the causative form, yunzilu, "he causes someone to descend," that is, the angels. Thus they avoid the impression given in the text of God's change of place. It is not God who descends, but he causes angels to descend, and make those appeals in his name. Or another example, from

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Genesis I, 27, Mohammedan tradition had taken over the saying: " G o d created Adam in his i m a g e . " God has no form. The little word Ms refers to Adam,—God created him in the f o r m which he (Adam) maintained. 5 These examples show the means constantly used to get rid of dogmatic difficulties by means of grammatical subterfuges. I n like manner recourse is often had to lexicographical devices, in which the many significations of an Arabic word may have been of great assistance. Here is an example, " H e l l will not be full, until the Almighty places his foot upon it (hell); then it says: 'enough, enough.' " 6 The depth of ingenuity, which has been applied to the interpretation of this text, so inimical to a refined conception of God, gives us a perfect example of the hermeneutic a r t so dear to the Ash'arite school. F i r s t of all it was thought that a purely external means of help could be found in the fact that in the traditional text the subject of the sentence: " h e places his f o o t " was replaced by a pronoun: " H e l l is not full until he places his foot upon i t . " Who? that is left in the d a r k ; at least the natural predicate is not connected with a subject which would mean " G o d . " This is naturally selfdeception, and nothing is gained by it. Others wish to remedy this, by retaining the subject al-jabar, the Almighty, but explaining that the word did not r e f e r to God. They can easily prove f r o m the language of the K o r a n and of tradition that this word also means a stubborn person. So the jabar who places his foot on hell is not God, but some violent person, a man sent to hell, whose violent intervention brings to an end the populating of hell. But even this way of avoiding the difficulty proved, on serious consideration, very illusive. The meaning of the traditional saying was established by a number of parallel versions, and thus placed beyond all doubt. I n many parallel texts, instead of jabar, Allah

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or " t h e lord of majesty" is expressly used. One cannot get out of this cul-de-sac. The subject must be God. But what does not the dogmatic exegete attempt in his desperate ingeniousness f His art failed with the subject, he now tries it on the object. He (without doubt then, " G o d " ) places his foot: hadamahu. Must this word be explained as foot? I t is indeed a homonym, and means several things. Kadam means among other things, also " a group of people, who have been sent in advance," in this case into hell. It is these people, then (not his foot) whom God sets in hell. But an authentic parallel version appears which unfortunately substitutes for the word hadamahu a synonym rijlahu. This undoubtedly means: "his foot." There is, however, no "undoubtedly" in the Arabic lexicon. The same word can mean so many things. Rijl also means jama'a, " t h e congregation. " Naturally God places such a congregation of sinners at the gate of hell, and the latter cries: ' ' enough, enough, enough." Although it is justifiable to call the process, apparent in this short extract, an example of exegetical absurdity yet the exegetes were not Mu'tazilites but Ash'arites of the deepest dye. How the founder himself would have poured forth the vials of philological wrath on the heads of his followers! X I I . This rationalistic attempt of the Ash'arite school, however welcome it was as the escape from the tajslm condemned on all sides, was bound to call forth decided discontent on the part of all the orthodox, faithful to tradition. In conjunction with this there is another fact of importance to be considered. The method of the Ash'arites aroused opposition among the orthodox theologians, because of the teaching which they had in common with the Mu'tazilites and which is the essential basis of every Kalam: " t h a t a demonstration based on traditional factors does not ensure certain knowledge."

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The knowledge which depends only on traditional sources, is uncertain; it is dependent on factors which can have only a relative value in the establishment of the facts, as for example of the subjective factor in the interpretation of peculiarities of rhetorical expression (tropes, metaphors, etc.). Absolute value can be ascribed to such sources of knowledge only in questions of legal practice, and even here they afford ground for variations in regard to the consequences. In questions of creed they have only a subsidiary value. The point of departure must be proofs through reason. They alone ensure definite knowledge.1 In this sense the late Egyptian Mufti Mohammed 'Abduh could recently affirm as a fundamental of true Islam " t h a t in a conflict between reason and tradition the right of decision belonged to reason, a principle," he says, "which very few oppose, in fact only those oppose who need not in any way be considered.' ' 2 If then the Ash'arites with their proofs of reason generally uphold orthodox dogma, and true to their master's principle, guard against using their syllogisms to attain formulas which lead away from true orthodoxy, then the prerogative granted to reason over tradition in dogmatic demonstration was bound to be an abomination in the eyes of the intransigent old school. How much the more in the eyes of the anthropomorphists, clinging to the letter, and who would not listen to metaphors and tropes and other rhetorical exegetical expression of the written attributes of God ? To the adherents of the old traditional school then, there was no difference between Mu'tazilites and Ash'arites. The Kalám in itself, its principle, c'est I'ennemi, whether it leads to heretical or orthodox results. 3 "Flee Kalám—no matter in what garb, as you flee before a lion," becomes the motto. Their feeling is expressed in a wrathful speech, attributed by them to al-Shafi'i. " M y

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judgment of the Kalam-people is, that they should be beaten with scourges and shoe-soles, and then led through all tribes and settlements with the cry, 'this is the reward of those who leave to one side the Koran and Sunna and give themselves to Kalam.' " 4 Kalam is a science, which does not result in the reward of God even if one reaches truth through it, and on the other hand one may easily become a heretic if one falls into error through it. 5 The true believer in Islam should not bow the knee to 'akl, reason. Reason is not necessary for grasping religious t r u t h ; this is contained in the Koran and Sunna. 0 There is no difference between Kalam and Aristotelian philosophy—both lead to heresy. They could use no phrase such as "fides quaerens intellectum." Belief is exclusively bound to the letters which have come down through the centuries; and reason must not intrude in this sphere. One can, therefore, assert of the mediating theology of the Ash'arites, that it fell between two stools. This is the reward of every mongrel movement looking in two directions. Philosophers and Mu'tazilites alike turn up their noses at the Ash'arites, as obscurantists, unmethodical minds, superficial dilettantes, with whom one cannot allow oneself to enter into serious disputation, but even this condemnation did not save them f r o m the fanatical curse of the orthodox. Little gratitude was shown them for having fought Aristotelian philosophy in the interests of religion. XIII. In addition to the actual theology of the Ash'arites, their natural philosophy also deserves special consideration. It may be said that it represents orthodox Islam's ruling conception of nature. The philosophy of Kalam is by no means to be regarded as a compact system, even though it can in general be said, that its philosophical view of the world follows mostly that of the pre-Aristotelian nature philosophers, 1 especially that

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of the Atomists. From the very beginning, even in the pre-Ash' arite days, its adherents are reproached with not recognizing the constancy of nature and the regularity of phenomena. The Mu'tazilite al-Jahiz mentions the objection of the Aristotelians to the adherents of his party, that their method in trying to prove unity, can be accepted only with the denial of all truths of nature. 2 Opponents unfamiliar with the deeper connection and meaning of his philosophical theories, could reproach Nazam, one of the boldest followers of the school, with the charge that he denied the law of the impenetrability of the body. 3 In fact there is handed down an opinion held by him, which appears to be the result of his tendency to adopt the view of nature held by the Stoics. 4 Nevertheless, although the Mu'tazilites opposed the peripatetic philosophy, quite a few of them wrapped themselves in an Aristotelian mantle and wished to make themselves more tolerable by means of philosophical flourishes, which had little influence with the philosophers. The latter contemptuously look down upon the methods of Kalam and do not regard the Mutakallimun as equal opponents, worthy of dispute. They could not find any ground in common. A serious strife over ideas was, therefore, impossible with them. " T h e Mutakallimun assert that the most important source of knowledge is reason; but what they call reason, is in reality not reason, and their method of thought does not correspond, in a philosophical sense, to the rules. What they call reason, and with which they try to act according to reason, is only a tissue of phantastic suppositions." To a still greater degree does this apply to the Ash'arites. What the Aristotelians, and neo-Platonists from the tenth to the thirteenth centuries, assert about the phantasies and unreasonableness of the natural philosophy of Kalam, 5 is also especially true of the Ash-

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'arites, who, in the interest of their dogmatic suppositions, oppose themselves to all modes of viewing things, which proceed from the regularity of law in nature. With the Pyrrhonists they deny the reliability of the sensuous perceptions and allow as wide room as possible to the supposition of the illusion of the senses. They deny the law of causality, the "source and loadstar of all rational knowledge."* Nothing occurs in the world as an absolute necessity according to unchangeable laws. What precedes is not the cause of that which follows. They entertain such fear of the idea of causality, that they do not even readily consider God as the first Cause, but rather as the "maker" (fa'il) of nature and its manifestations.6 They consequently grant the possibility of the unnatural. It is possible to see things which do not fall within the field of sight. It could sarcastically be said of them, that they grant the possibility of a blind man in China seeing a gnat in Andalusia.7 For the law of nature they substitute the idea of habit. It is not law, but simply the habit laid upon nature by God, that makes certain things follow others; this succession is not, however, necessary. It is not necessary that abstinence from food and drink should be followed by hunger and thirst but it is usually so. Hunger and thirst arise because the accidence of hungriness and thirstiness is attached to the substance; if the accidence is left out (and God can withhold it), then hunger and thirst are also left out. The Nile rises and falls from habit not as a result of causal natural events. If the accidence of the rise is left out, then the level of the river would not change. Bach and every thing then, is explained by the hypothesis: "what appears to us as a law, is only a habit of nature.'' God has laid the habit upon nature, that definite constellations of the stars should correspond to definite consecutive occurrences. * Th. Gomperz.

DOGMATIC DEVELOPMENT.

139

The astrologers, accordingly, may be right. They only express themselves wrongly. 8 Every occurrence, whether in a positive or negative sense, is a special creative act of God. As a rule he follows the usual way in nature. This, however, is not without exception; when God suspends habitual natural phenomena, there occurs what we call a miracle, and they an interruption of habit. The continuity of habit corresponds to new acts of creation. We are accustomed to ascribe shadows to the fact that the sun is absent from a place. Not at all! The shadow is not the result of the absence of the sun; it is created and is something positive. In this way the adherents of Kalam. are able to explain the tradition that in paradise there is a tree in whose shadow one can ride a hundred years without leaving its shade. How is this possible since before the entrance of the pious into paradise " t h e sun is folded u p " (Sura 81, v. 1) ? Where there is no sun there can be no shade! But shade has nothing to do with the sun; God creates the shadows; here is an example of the interruption of the habitual. 9 This view of nature runs through the whole world conception of the Ash'arite dogmatists. A1 Ash'arl himself had already widely used it. To him, for example, is ascribed the teaching that it is only a custom of nature that scent, taste, etc., cannot be perceived by eye-sight; God could give our eye-sight the power of noticing smell. But this is not the habit of nature. 10 Thus, the orthodox dogmatism based on Ash'arite fundamentals, demands the rejection of the views of causality, in whatever form. Not only is the working of unchangeable and eternal natural laws as the cause of all acts of nature denied, but even the formulas of causality which approach the standpoint of Kalam are condemned, as for example, that "causality is not eternal, but arose within time, and that God has given to the causes the power to constantly call forth the consequent events." 1 1

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MOHAMMED AND ISLAM.

If this view of the world excludes the conception of chance it does so in the sense that it stipulates a decisive aim for that which happens. But it does not take this exclusion of chance in the sense that, that which happens is the infallible consequence of a natural causality expressing itself in law. Within this view of nature there was found then, sufficient place for all the demands of dogmatism. How easily a formula was given for miracles, has just been shown. The same is true for the acceptance of all supernatural things, which are demanded by the dogmas of Islam. Since there is no law and no causality, there is also nothing miraculous or supernatural. If the accidence of life vouchsafes decaying bones, resurrection is to follow. I t is a special act, just as all natural phenomena are to be traced back to special acts, and not permanent laws. In this way Kalam, in the form given to it by al Ash'ari and as accepted by Moslem orthodoxy, set up a system of thought in opposition to Aristotelianism which adapted itself very well to the support of the doctrines of faith. This has been the ruling Moslem philosophy of religion since the twelfth century. But the essential values of their subtleties were to be degraded by a counterpoise, through the introduction of a religious historical factor, which will form the subject of the next chapter.

NOTES.

141

NOTES. I . 1. This claim is expressed in Islam in the sentence: "al-'ulamä warathat al-anbiyä": " t h e theologians are the heirs of the prophets.'' 2. See the parts of the Hadith bearing on the disapproval of such movements Ibn S a ' d IY, I 141, 15 ff. ZDMG L Y I I 393 f . Cf. also B. Tafsir no. 237 (Sura 41), where a number of contradictions in the Koran are given, which were submitted to Ibn 'Abbäs. I I . 1. Ibn S a ' d V 174, 13. Before his accession to the government, 'Abdalmalik led a pious, ascetic life. For the piety of 'Abdalmalik, see Wellhausen: " D a s Arabische ßeich und sein S t u r z " 134. The Kitäb al-imäina wal-siyäsa, (Cairo 1904) wrongly ascribed to I b n Kuteiba; (cf. de Goeje, "Rivistadegli Studi Orientali I 415-421), is fond of dates for the piety of the Omayyads. ' Abdalmalik's father, Merwän I—who, according to another source, worked zealously as caliph for the founding of religious law (Ibn S a ' d X I 117, 8)—was discovered by the people, who came to offer him the caliphate, before a little lamp busy with recitations of the Koran ( I I 22 end). 'Abdalmalik himself, calls the people to a "revival of the Koran and Sünna. . . . There could be no disagreement as to his p i e t y " (ibid. 25, 9). Acts of devotion to God are mentioned even of H a j ä j , scorned by the pious (72, 3; 74, 10; cf. Tab. I I 1186 arrangements of days for fasting and prayer in the Mosques; note especially Jähiz, Kayaivän Y 63, 5 from below, where it is said of him that he manifested religious reverence for the Koran in contrast to the devotion of the Omayyad circle to poetry and genealogy). Further proof is furnished by the encomiums as religious heroes bestowed by the poets on caliphs and statesmen by way of flattery; e. g. Jerlr, Diwan (Cairo 1313) I 168, 8; I I 97, 5 f r . bei. (Merwän, the ancestor of 'Omar I I , is called du-1-nür [possessor of light] and introduced as adding to the fame of the pious caliph). N a k ä ' i d ed. Bevan 104 v. 19 the same poet calls the caliph imäm al-lmdä, ' ' the Imam of the (religious) correct g u i d a n c e " ; see also ' A j ä j , append. 22, 15. cf. Muh. Stud. I I 381. 2. Becker, " P a p y r i Schott-Reinhardt" I (Heidelberg 1906) 35. 3. I b n S a ' d IV, I 137 5. 20.—Husein and his partisans are opposed as "people who are disloyal to din and oppose the Imam (Yazid, the son of M u ' ä w i y y a ) . " (Tabarl I I 342, 16.) 4. Thus characterized by Wellhausen, ' ' Die religiös-politischen Oppo-

142

MOHAMMED AND ISLAM.

5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.

11. 12. 13. 14.

15.

16.

17.

18.

19.

sitionsparteien im alten I s l a m " (Berlin 1901, Abhand lungen d. Kgl. Ges. d Wiss. Gottingen, Phil. Hist. Cl. Y no. 2)7. Tabarï I 2909, 16. The defeat of such rebels is praised by J a r ï r (Dîwàn I 62, 13) as the conquest of the mubtadi'fi-1-dïn (innovators in religion). Van Vloten, "Recherches sur la domination arabe e t c . " (Amsterdam 1894) 36. Lammens, " É t u d e s sur le règne de M o ' â w i y y a " 154 fE. (Mélanges Beyrouth I I 46 fE.) This follows from Ibn S a ' d Y 68, 23 fE. This is frequently mentioned in colored accounts as one of their faults. (Yasta'thirûna bilfey'), Ibn S a ' d IV, I 166, 11; Abu Dâwûd, Sunan I I 183. Tabarï I I 300, 9 fE. For their li'da's Kumeit is very important, Hâshimiyyât ed. Horovitz 123, 7 fE. e. g. Sa'id ibn al-Musayyab, who in every prayer cursed the Banû Merwân (Ibn S a ' d V 95, 5). This, however, does not exclude the possibility of a M u r j i ' i t e opposing the cruelties of the H a j â j (Ibn S a ' d V I 205, 1 2 ) ; without, however, involving a judgment with regard to the Omayyad caliphate. For example: Ibn Sïrïn is spoken of arja' al-nâs li-hâdihi-lummati, i. e. he was the most indulgent in his judgment of his fellow-men, but- severe with himself (Nawawï, Tàhdïb 108, 7 f r . bel.). According to the report of several M u r j i ' i t e s the pious caliph 'Omar I I , with whom they discussed these questions, attached himself to their point of view. Ibn S a ' d V I 218, 20. Ibn Sa'd, ibid. 214, 19, al-mwrji'at al-ûlâ. The views of Bureida ibn al-Husaib furnish an example of this tendency, ibid. IV, I 179, 11 fE. M u r j i ' i t e s contra the adherents of 'All, see " M u h . S t u d . " I I 91 note 5. cf. Sabâ'i, the fanatical Shï'ite (adherent of 'Abdallah ibn Sabâ) in contrast to M u r j i ' . Ibn S a ' d V I 192, 17. This contrast lasts up till the time when the M u r j i ' confession assumed only a theoretical importance. J â b iz ( " B a y â n " ed. Cairo, 1311-13, I I 149 below) cites the following Shï'ite epigram : " I f it amuses you to see a M u r j i ' i t e dying of his illness before his (real) death, Keep on praising 'Alï before him, and pronounce pious blessings for the prophet and those of his family (ahli b e y t i h i ) . " The judgment of the Omayyad ruler is made very clear by these pious fanatics, Aghânï X X 106; the Kharijites kill in a most horrible manner a man, who disseminates a Hadïth, in which

NOTES.

143

the prophet warns against rebellion and recommends passive sufferance, Ibn Sa"d V 182, 15 ff. 20. This does not contradict the dates given by van Vloten on the I r j ä Z D M G XLV 161 ff. 21. Ibn Khallikän ed. Wüstenfeld, no. 114 Bishr al-Merici. 22. For differences of opinion on this question within the limits of orthodoxy (Ash'arites and Hanifites) see Fr. Kern, "Mitteilungen des Semin. f ü r Orient. S p r . " Jahrg. X I (1908) section I I 267. I t is very characteristic of the Hadith, to ascribe already to a " companion'' the theory of the ' ' increase and decrease of f a i t h , " Ibn S a ' d IV, I I 92, 15 ff. 23. I t finally happened that the designation of M u r j i ' a came to correspond to deistic views held in common by Moslems which set aside completely ritualistic observances, while clinging firmly to the principles of monotheistic faith. The characteristic sign of the Murji'ites is the depreciation of the ' arnal. Mukaddasi (wrote 375/985) designates Murji, 'Moslems in name' whom he had observed in the province of the Demäwend, and of whom he reports, that there are no mosques within their territory, and that the population neglect the practical practices of Islam. They content themselves with the fact that they are TOuwahhidün, ' monotheists' and that they pay their taxes to the Islamic state ("Biblioth. geograph. a r a b . " ed. de Goeje I I I 398 below). I I I . 1. Musnad Ahmed (Jäbir) quotes Ibn Kayyim al-Jauziyya Kitab al-salät wa-ahkäm täriMhä (Cairo, Na'asäni 1313) 46. 2. Tirmidi I I 261 below; a favorite prayer formula begins: " 0 God, do not abandon us to ourselves, so that we become impot e n t . " Behä al-din al-'Ämili, Mikhlät (Cairo 1317) 129, 2, where a large number of old prayer formulas are collected. 3. Such formulas of oaths (barä'a) in Mas'üdi, Murnj V I 297; Ya'kübi ed. Houtsma I I 505, 509; Ibn al-Tiktikä ed. Ahlwardt 232.' 4. I see subsequent to the completion of this chapter that my view coincides with that of Carra de Vaux, ' ' La Doctrine de 1 ' I s l a m ' ' (Paris 1909) 60. IV. 1. Hubert Grimme, Mohammed vol. I I (Münster 1895) 105 ff. 2. Alfred v. Kremer, " Culturgeschichtl. Streifzüge auf dem Gebiete des I s l a m s " (Leipzig 1873) 7 ff. 3. Cf. on this ZDMG L V I I 398. 4. Wellhausen, " D a s Arab. Beich und sein S t u r z " 217, 235. Wellhausen emphasizes in the later passage, that such a partisanship did not arise from dogmatic but political considerations. The advocates of free-will refer to letters, which Hasan al Basri is said to have sent to the caliphs 'Abdalmalik and Haj ä j , in which the pious man wishes to convince those in power of the absurdity of their clinging to a belief in a servum arbi-

MOHAMMED AND ISLAM.

144

5. 6. 7. 8. V. 1. 2.

3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8.

9. 10.

11. 12. 13.

trium. Cf. Aimed ibn Yahyâ, Kitab al-milal wal-nihal (ed. T. W. Arnold, Al-mu'tazilah (Leipzig 1903) 12 ff.). ZDMG ibid. 394. Note the fatalistic verse of Farazdak, ibid. L X 25. Aghânî X 99, 10. Ibn Kuteiba, Ma'ärif 225. al-Imäma wal-siyüsa I I 41. Ibn Sa'd V I 236, 19. Some name Moli. ibn al-Hanafiyya as the one who first defended the thesis of the Murji'; ibid. V 67, 16. For the definition given here see " K u l t u r D. Gegenw. " I , Y 64. For this meaning of the appellation Mu'tazila see ZDMG XT J , 35 note 4. cf. Ibn Sa'd V 225, 4, where Mu'tazilite is used as a synonym of ' äbid and zâhid to denote ascetics. In an old Arabic translation of the N. T., (publ. 1233) originating in Nestoi'ian circles, Pharisee (one who sets himself apart) is translated by the same word (Mashrik X I 905 penult). A recent monograph has been written by Henri Galland, " E s s a i sur les Mo'tazelites, les rationalistes de l ' I s l a m " (Geneva 1906). Cf. the biography by T. W. Arnold, Al-Mu' tazilah 18, 12. In Beihakï ed. Schwally 304, penult, ff.; the ascetic picture in Arnold, 1. c. 22, 5 ff. In the 4th century already sheikh m in zuhhäd al-mu' tazila : " a sheikh of the Mu'tazilite ascetics," Yaküt ed. Margoliouth I I 309, 11. Kremer, ' ' Culturgesehichte des Orients unter den Chalifen ' ' I I 267. In Jähiz, Bayawän I I I 18 (cf. V I 11 on sceptics). Such principles make their impression even on a man as far from the Mu'tazilite point of view as Ghazâlï; it is apparent in Ms expression (Môznë sedek, Hebrew ed. Goldenthal, 2 3 5 ) : " h e who does not doubt, cannot think rationally. ' ' The Arabic original of Ghazâlï 's saying is quoted by Ibn Tufeil, Hayy ibn Yakzân (ed. Gauthier, Algiers 1900) 13, 4 fr. below. Mâturîdï, Commentary to al-Filch al-akbar (Haidaräbäd 1321; authenticity very improbable) 19. Jâhiz 1. c. VI 95 (in place of the gap here designated by dots, the Arabic text as well as in the Vienna Jähiz-manuscript has a word, evidently corrupt, according to the metre, which cannot be made out). To this independent activity of reason (96, 6) is opposed the dependent traditional repetition (taldld), which marks the average man. Cf. Maimüni, "Guide des égarés" I c. 73, propos. X I I . On the scepticism of the Mutakallimün see ZDMG L X I I 2. " B u c h vom Wesen der S e e l e " 13, note to 4, 5 ff. Fakhr al-dïn al-Eâzî, Mafätlh al-ghaib see St. V 432.

NOTES.

145

VI. 1. Ibn 'Asäkir, Ta'rïTch Dimashk, section 340. (Lanberg Coll., now in the library of Yale University, New Haven, Conn.) 2. The Hanbalite theologian Muwaffak al-din 'Abdallah ibn Kudâma (d. 620/1233) wrote: Damm al-ta'wll (the condemnation of the t a ' w ï l ) , of which two manuscript copies have lately been acquired for the library of the Asiatic Society of Bengal ( " L i s t of Arabic and Persian Mss. a c q u i r e d " . . . 1903-1907 no. 405. 795; add to Brockelmann I 398). I n various writings Ibn Teymiyya (see concerning him ch. V I ) frequently attacks the ta'wïl of the Mutakallimün and indicates the proper boundary of ta'wïl in the traditional sense (e. g. Tafsîr Sürat alïkhlâs 71 ff., ïïisâlat al-iklll fi-l-mutashabïh wal-ta'wU, in Majmü'at al-rasä'ü (Cairo 1323) I I ) . 3. Abü M a ' m a r al-Hudall (d. 236/850 in Baghdad), TadUrat alhuffäz I I 56. V I I I . 1. " A h m e d ibn Hanbai and the M i h n a " (Leiden 1897). Cf. ZDMG L H 155 ff. 2. Muh. Stud. I I 59. 3. Shahrastäni ed. Cureton 68. 4. ZDMG L X I I 7. 5. Kitab al-ibäna 'an usül al-dijäna (Haidaräbäd 1321) 41. I X . 1. For references and further discussion see ZDMG L I I 158 and the introduction to " L e livre de Mohammed ibn T o u m e r t " (Algiers 1903) 61-63; 71-74. 2. Shahrastäni, 1. c. 51 ult. 3. Mâwerdï, ' ' Constitutiones politicae ' ' ed. Enger 61 ff. The Imàm al-Shâfi'ï makes no difference between the two zones, dar al-Islâm and där al-hari. On this account differences arise with other schools in regard to derivative questions cf. Abü Zeid al-Dabbûsï, Ta'sïs al-nazar (Cairo o. J . ) 58. 4. T. W. Arnold, Al-Mu' tazilah 44, 12, 57, 5. X. 1. For the title see above V I I I note 5. 2. M. Schreiner " Z u r Geschichte des Ash'aritenturns." (Actes du Huitième Congrès international des Orientalistes, Section I A, 105.) X I . 1. I n the rabbinical Hagada we find likewise the view expressed that questions of law are discussed a f t e r the manner of the school; bab. PesäcMrn 50a beginning Khagîgâ 15b below, Gittln 6b below; God himself is supposed to occupy himself with the consideration of the varying opinions of rabbinical authorities, he himself searches in the law; a point of view often expressed in Seder Eliyyähü rabbä (ed. Friedmann, Vienna 1900) 61 penult. 2. Musnad Ahmed I V 66. 3. Muwatta (ed. Cairo) I 385. Other examples, which have formed the object of the ta'wïl will be found in the author's work: " D i e Z a h i r i t e n " 168. A collection of Hadïths, as a support of the

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most crude anthropomorphism, was made, see Yäküt ed. Margoliouth I I I I 153. Also Bukh. Tauhid no. 35 (ed. Juynboll 448), in Damascus by Hasan ibn ' A l i al-Ahwäzi (d. 446/1055). 4. In one version of Ibn 8 a ' d V I 37, 23 yahbitu closing: " a n d when morning comes he again returns on h i g h . " 5. Other explanations also have been attempted to explain away the anthropomorphism of this utterance; they are put together in Abü Muh. ibn al-Sid al-Batal-yüsi, al-Intisäf (ed. ' O m a r alMahmasänl, Cairo 1319) 120 f. (this book is of great importance for the knowledge of the questions treated here), Moh. al-'Abd a r i ' s Kitäb al-majal (Alexandria 1293) I I 25 ff. cf. also Subki, Tabakät al-Shafi' iyya I I 135, 13. 6. Bukh, Tafslr no. 264 (Sura 50 v. 29) with Ibn al-Athir, Nihäya I 142; L A s. v. jbr V 182 cf. Bukh. Tauhid. no. 7 (ed. Juynboll 448). X I I . 1. See on this the definite formulation in Fakhr al-din al Räzi, Ma'älim usül al-dxn ch. I I par. 10 (ed. Cairo 1323, and the same author's work Muhassal p. 9). A f t e r enumerating the subjective elements of the traditional demonstration he says: " f r o m this it follows, that the traditional proofs only give conjectures, the proofs of reason, on the contrary have apodictical power; conjecture cannot be opposed to apodictical knowledge.'' The fundamental principle of Kaläm is invariably äl-dalä'il al-ndkliyya lä tup id al yakXn, al-Iji J o r d j ä n i , Mawakif (Stambul 1239) 79. 2. al-Isläm wal-nasräniyya ma'al-'ilm wal-maäaniyya (Cairo 1323, printed a f t e r the death of the author) p. 56. 3. Cf. Schreiner, " B e i t r ä g e zur Geschichte der theologischen Bewegungen im I s l a m . ' ' (Leipzig 1899) 64-75 = ZDMG L H 528539. 4. Ibn Teymiyya, in the great 'Akida hamawiyya, Majmü'at alrasä'il al-Tcubrä I 468 below. 5. Subki, Tabakät al-Shäfi' iyya I 241, 5. 6. A famous authority in tradition, Abu Suleymän al-Khattäbi alBusti (d. 388/998), wrote a book: al-ghunya (not al-ghayba, as in " Abü-1-Mahäsin ibn Taghri B i r d i " annals ed. "W. Popper, Berkeley 1909, 578, 15) 'an al-Tcaläm wa-ahlihi, " t h e superfluity of Kaläm and its people." Subki, ibid. I I 218, 15. X I I I . 1. On the sources of the metaphysics and natural philosophy of the Mu'tazilites we now have the investigation of S. Horovitz: " Ü b e r den Einfluss der Griechischen Philosophie auf die Entwicklung des K a l ä m " (Breslau 1909) and cf. the review by M. Horten in Oriental Literatur-Zeitung X I I 391 ff. On the philos. of Kaläm see Horten: ' ' Die philosophischen Probleme der spekulativen Theologie im I s l a m " (Bonn 1910; "Renaissance und Philosophie" I I I ) . 2. Kitäb al-hayawän I I 48.

NOTES.

147

3. Mawâkif, 1. c. 448. 4. Cf. S. Horovitz, 1. c. 12 and Horten, ZDMG L X I I I 784 S. 5. See above note 5, 11 and 12. 6. Maimûnî, Dalalat

al-hâ'irin

I c. 69 beg.

7. Jorjânî to Mawâkif 512, 3 fr. bel. 8. Ibn Hajar al-Heitami, Fatâwï hadithiyya (Cairo 1307) 35. 9. Ithâf

al-sâdat

àl-muttakïn

(ed. Cairo 1302) X 53.

10. Mawâkif 506. 11. The unacceptable formulas of the conception of causality are collected in Senûsï (toward the end of the 15th century), " L e s Prolégomènes théologiques," published and translated by J. D. Luciani (Algiers 1908) 108-112. Senusi, whose compendia count as fundamentals of dogmatic orthodoxy, as is apparent in the list of his works (Belkacem al-Hafnaoui, "Biographies des savants musulmans de l'Algérie" I 185 penult.) has devoted another special work to the refutation of causality, " i n which he opposes with strong arguments the doctrine of invariable causes. ' '

CHAPTER IV. ASCETICISM AND SUFIISM.

I. Early Islam was ruled by the consciousness of absolute dependence, and the conception of world negation. As has been seen, it was the vision of the destruction of the world and of the judgment of mankind which first made Mohammed a prophet. This view bred a spirit of asceticism among his followers, and contempt of the world became their motto. Nevertheless, although Mohammed, to the very end, proclaimed the blessedness of paradise as the goal of all faithful life, owing to the changing conditions in Medina and to the spread of his warlike activities, the world point of view soon unconsciously came to play an important part in his considerations. The vast majority of Arabs who came over to him were chiefly won and held by the prospect of material advantages. Not all belonged to those of whom the early historians of Islam speak, hurra (praying brothers) and bahka'un (weeper, penitents). The prospect of spoils was indeed a most magnetic recruiting force for Islam. The prophet himself recognized this when he tried to heighten the zeal of the warrior through the maghanim hathlra (much booty) promised by Allah (Sura 48, v. 19). In the old accounts of the maghasl (expeditions) of the prophet, it is surprising to note the vast and varied spoils which with the regularity of a natural law appear to follow in the wake of every holy war. To be sure, the prophet does not deny the higher ends to be attained by means of these marauding expeditions. He preaches against the finality of merely worldly aims, of dunya: " T h e r e are many maghanim with A l l a h "

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149

(Sura 4, v. 96). "Ye strive after the trumpery of this world; but Allah wishes what is beyond" (Sura 8, v. 68). The ascetic tone of the first Mecca utterances passed over, to a certain extent, into the Medina realism. But actual conditions had led the spirit of the young Moslem community into quite other paths than those in which the prophet moved at the beginning of his activity, when he first called his faithful to follow him. Even before his death and notably immediately after, the watchword had changed. In place of the denial of the world came the idea of the conquest of the world. Confession of Islam was to result for the faithful in "the attainment of material prosperity, in supremacy over the Arabs and subjection of the non-Arabs, and besides all this a kingly estate in paradise." 1 And this conquest of the world was not as a matter of fact, aimed only toward the ideal. The treasures of Ktesiphon, Damascus, and Alexandria were no inducement to the strengthening of ascetic inclinations. F a r more surprising is it to find accounts as early as the third century of Islam, telling of the great wealth collected by the pious warriors and worshippers, of the great pieces of land which they called their own, the comfortable houses, which they built, both at home and in the conquered countries, and the luxury with which they surrounded themselves. These facts are manifest in the accounts of the possessions of those people, whom Moslem piety most loves to honor. Take for example the property left by the Kureishite al-Zubeir ibn al-'Awwam, a man so pious that he was counted among the ten people whom the prophet, during his life-time, could assure of an entrance into Paradise because of their merit in Islam. The prophet called them his apostles (hawarl). This Zubeir left an estate, which after the deduction of all debts, yielded net proceeds amounting in the various reports to

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between 35,200,000 and 52,000,000 dirhems. It is true he is accredited with great generosity; but he was nevertheless a Croesus, and the inventory which could be drawn up of the estates which he called his own in the various parts of the recently conquered lands does not look like contempt of the world, eleven houses in Medina besides those in Basra, Kufa, Fostat, Alexandria, 2 Another one of the ten pious men whom the prophet assured of paradise, Talha ibn ' Ubeidallah possessed lands worth roundly thirty million dirhems. When he died his treasurer disposed of 2,200,000 dirhems in cash, above and beyond this. His property in cash is valued according to another account in the following way: he left one hundred leather bags, of which each held three kintars of gold. 3 A heavy load that for paradise! About the same time (37/657) there died in K u f a a pious man, named Khabbab, originally a very poor devil, who in his youth was a craftsman in Mecca, according to Arab views at that time not even an honorable business for free gentlemen. 4 He became a Moslem and had to suffer much from his heathen fellow-townsmen. He was tortured with red-hot irons and threatened with still other torments, but he remained steadfast. He also took a zealous part in the wars of the prophet. When this man, so zealous in his faith, lay on his death-bed in Kufa, he could point to a trunk in which he had collected forty thousand—probably dirhems—and expressed the fear that through this wealth he had anticipated the reward for his endurance in faith. 5 The rich share which came to the warriors of plunder and money offered favorable opportunities for amassing such worldly goods. A f t e r a campaign into North Africa under the leadership of 'Abdallah ibn Abl Sarh during the time of the Caliph ' Othman, each rider received three thousand mithkals in gold from the booty. Those who, like Hakim ibn Hizam, declined to accept the stipend

ASCETICISM AND SUFIISM.

151

offered them by Abu Bekr and 'Omar, must have been very rare. 6 The predominant note in the A r a b rush of conquests, was, as Leone Caetani shows with great clearness in several places in his work on Islam, material need and greed. 7 This is to be explained by the economic condition of Arabia, which kindled the enthusiasm f o r migration f r o m the inherited land to more favorable points. F o r this migration, founded on economic necessity, the new faith furnished a welcome motive. 8 By this we do not mean to assert that it was these avaricious aims alone that prevailed in Islam's holy wars. Besides those warriors who " h a d entered the war through worldly desires," there were always men who, inspired by religious zeal, took p a r t in the battles f o r the sake of paradise. 9 But, to be sure, it was not this last faction which really stamped the character of the fighting masses. So, in a very early epoch of its history, did Islam's immediate outward success force the ascetic ideas, once so dominant, into the background. Frequently worldly considerations and worldly wishes, could be satisfied by a zealous share in the spread of the religion of Mohammed. Even in the generation a f t e r Mohammed it could be said that at this time every pious deed had double value, "because it is no longer the next life which is our care, as formerly, but the dunya, the interest of this life, which attracts u s . ' n o II. There was no break in the steady decline of ascetic tendencies, when with the rise of the Omayyads the theocratic spirit got the worst of it even in the government, and public spirit was no longer guided by the saints. According to a saying of the prophet which reflects the view of the pious, " t h e r e will be no more emperors in Syria and no Khosroes in 'Irak. By God, ye will spend your treasures in the path of God." I n Hadlths bearing on the subject, the spending of the

152

MOHAMMED AND ISLAM.

treasures gained as booty " i n the way of God" and for the good of the poor and needy goes far to offset the materialistic aim and success of conquests.1 But this did not exactly suit the people who had to decide about the spending of the acquired goods. The treasures which were amassed through conquests and continually increased through clever administration, were not, in the Hadlth, simply to be spent " i n the way of God," i. e., for pious ends. The classes, into whose hands such worldly goods fell wished to use them for the enjoyments of this world. They did not wish simply to "gather up treasures in heaven.'' An ancient tradition tells that Mu' awiyya, the Syrian governor at the time of the caliph 'Othman, the subsequent founder of the Omayyad dynasty of caliphs, fell into a quarrel with the pious Abu Darr al-Ghifari, over the interpretation of the Koran verse (Sura 9, v. 34), "And those who hoard up gold and silver and do not give it out in the way of Allah, to them carry the message of painful punishment." The worldly-minded statesman held that this was a warning which could not be applied to the actual condition of the Moslem state, but which was directed against the covetous leaders of other religions (the preceding words apply to them); the pious ones, on the other hand, contended, "the warning is directed against them and against us." This did not suit Mu'awiyya, and he considered Abu Darr's exegesis dangerous enough to rouse the caliph against him. The latter summoned the man to Medina, and exiled him to a small place in the neighborhood, so that he should not, by his hostile teachings, influence public opinion against the ruling spirit.2 This is a reflection of the ruling opinion, to which even the interpreters of the religious teachings had to yield. Those who interpreted the original ideal of Islam and, like Abu Darr, in the name of the prophet propounded the teaching "Gold and silver amassed by him who does

ASCETICISM AND SUFIISM.

153

not use it for pious purposes, it shall be to him as coals of fire,"—such, a person was regarded as a recluse, since he declined to recognize anyone as his brother who, in spite of his fidelity to Islam, erected large buildings and claimed fields or herds as his own.3 As a matter of fact, we find in the specimens of religious thought, signs of the unconcealed disapproval of the asceticism which went beyond the norm of legal requirement, although in the first decade of the prophet's career it had received his unconditional approbation. We encounter an entirely changed spirit, with the Hadith form supplying the necessary documents for its confirmation. The ambition to acquire transcendental possessions could naturally not be blotted out of the Islamic view of the world; but it was to share its power with the appreciation of worldly interests. In support of this Aristotelian mean a teaching of the prophet was produced: " T h e best among you is not that one who deserts this world in favor of the next, nor he who does the opposite; the best among you is he who takes of both." 4 Examples of excessive asceticism are constantly given in such a manner in the traditional sources as to imply that the prophet disapproved of such tales. The most important documents on this subject are the reports of the ascetic tendencies of 'Abdallah, the son of the general' Amr ibn al-'Asi, famous in the early history of Islam. The story pictures him in contrast to his father, as one of the leading religious disciples of the prophet and the most zealous searcher of his law.3 The prophet hears of his inclination to impose continuous fasts on himself, and to deprive himself of sleep in order to recite the Koran during the whole night; and he exhorts him earnestly to limit these ascetic habits to a reasonable degree. "Your body has claims upon you, and your wife has claims upon you, and your guest has claims upon you." 6 " H e who practices continuous fasts

154

MOHAMMED AND ISLAM.

has (in truth) not fulfilled the f a s t , " that is, it will not be counted to him £IS i Koran, 143 ( I I I , 4)—on the toler204 (IV, 4), 209 ( X I I I , 14), 285. ![ ance of the Shiite, 256.

348

MOHAMMED AND ISLAM.

Charity begins a t home, 155. j Day of Judgment, 5, 6, 10. Chicago, 322. I (Dies irae). Christians, 14. Dervishes, 180 ff. Attitude towards them, 39 ff. Determinism, 100 ff. Sunnites more tolerant towards Dhyana (Hindu), 175. them than Shiites, 260, 292 ( X V I I , Dikr, 163, 169, 176, 202 ( I I I , 5). 15). Dikri, 284 ( X I I , 3). Food, 260, 292 ( X V I I , 18, 19). Dildar ' A1J, 282 (XI, 16), 287 ( X I I I , Marriage with Christian women, 5). 260. Din, 9. Sunnite charity shared with, 261. Din Muhdath, 296. Opposition to asceticism of, 160 ft'. Disparitas cultus, 215. Christian elements in Islam, 3, 8, Docetism, 241. 13 if., 30 ( V I I , 1). Dogma, 194. Christian monasticism influenced by Dositheos, Dositheites, 242. Sufiism, 203 (IV, 1). Dreyfus, Hippolyte, 321. Christian influence on the Kadarites, Druses, 267, 270. 100. Du-l-rumma, 68. On the ascetics, 160 ff., 164 ff., Dunya, 148 if. 172, 199 ( I I , 6). On the Nusairl, 273. E. Clement of Alexandria, 179. Ecclesia oppressa, 261. Coele-Syria, 259. 1 Elias, 242. Companions, 296. Elijah Mansur, 243. Consensus ecclesiae ( i j m a ) , 57. Emanation, doctrine of, 264 ff. Creed, Hindu influence on, 324. English Royal Asiatic Society, 327. Epiphanes, 208 ( X I , 8). D. Equality of nations and men in Behaism, 315-6. Daba'ih, ahl al-Kitab, 282 if. ( X V I I , : Eschatology, 5 if., 101, 108. 20). ' Hopes, 246. al-Dahabi, 76 ( I I , 9), 78 (V, 4, 7), Invisible Imam, 242. 82 (IX, 14), 82 (X, 6), 204 (IV, 3), 204 (V, 1), 205 ( V I I , 1), 207 Euting, Julius, 309. (XI, 4), 209 ( X I I I , 13), 277 (IV, Evil, 112. 6). Da'i, 225. Da'ire wali, 284 ( X I I , 3). al-Damlri, 72, 80 (VII, 3), 81 ( V I I I , 5), 82 (X, 3, 4, 5), 203 ( I I I , 9), 279 (IX, 8). Dammiyya, 233. Daniel, 322. Dar al-Harb, 125. al-Dariml, 81 ( V I I , 7). Dawud al-Ta'i, 201 ( I I I , 17).

F. Fadl-AUah, 269. Failasuf (philosopher), 321. Eakhr-dln-al-Razi, 80 (VI, 4), 144 (V, 13), 146 ( X I I , 1), 209 ( X I I I , 14), 275 ( I I , 2), 287 ( X I I I , 5). Fakir, 164. Famagusta, 315. Fana, 175, 207 ( I X , 1), 207 (XI, 4).

INDEX. Farazdak, 144 (IV, 5), 280 ( X I I , 1). Farâ'idiyya, 326. al-Fârikï, 288 (XIV, 4 ) . Farmasün (franc-maçon), 321. al-Fashnï, 281 ( X I , 5). Fäsik, 195. Fasting, 8, 13, 60. Fatalism ( see free will). Fätiha, 60. Fätima, 316, 222-3. Fätimide dynasty, 263, 278 ( V I I , 2). Ferîd ed-dïn ' A t t â r , 205 (VI, 7). Fikh in religious law, 51, 191. Fischer, Aug., on interpolations in tlie Koran, 34 ( X I I , 1). Fisk (sin), 65. Five points of Islam, 13. Frederick I I , 169. Free-thinkers, 106. Free-will, 97 ff., 103. Friday, 14. Friedländer, I.—Essays on the Sliiites, 278 ( V I I I , 2-4), 281 (XI, 4-5), 284 ( X I I , 2). Fukahâ, 53. G. Gabriel, 272. Garbe, Prof. R., 328. Ghassanide conquest, 323. Ghazâlï, Abü Hamid Mohammed, 189 ff., 197, 214,' 306, 311. ' ' Generator of Religion, ' ' 193. " R e v i v a l , " 193. "Criterion of B e l i e f , " 197. Teaches tolerance, 197. Fights the Ta'limiyya, 270. Ghifârï, 152. Ghulät, 233. Ghusn a'zam, 320. Gnostics, 14. Influence on Sufiism, 179. Influence on Shiism, 273. Influence on Behaism, 314. God, 6, 7, 9 fï., 109 ff. Power, 2.

349

Submission to, 6, 10, 12. Love, 24. Mercy, 24. God of war, 24. Cunning, 25, 26. Does not lead astray, 99. Unity, 110. Justice, 110. Necessity, 111. Attributes, 115 £f. Gompers, Theodore, 252. Good, Distinction between evil and, 112. Greeks, 16. Grierson, Prof., 327. Grimme, Hubert, 99. H. Hadith, 43 ff. Importance of, 17, 48. Criticism, 44. Reconstructed, 44. Shows Koranic aim, 45. Strikes chord of tenderness, 46. Of Abü Darr, 47. Invented later, 49. Growth under Abbasides, 53. Shiite vs. Sunnite, 255 ff. Departure from, 333. Hafiz, 167, 184, 205 (VI, 8). Hagada see Agada. H a j ä j , ibn Yüsuf, 88, 141 ( I I , 1), 142 ( I I , 14). Hakim, 267, 270. Häkim ibn Hizäm, 150. Hallaj, 168. al-Hamadani, ibn al-Fakih, 275 ( I , 3). al-IIamadänl, Mohammed ibn 'Abdalrahmän, 281 (XI, 5). Hammer-Purgstall (Arab canticle of Love), 168. Hanbalites, 113 ff., 131. Fanatics, 195. Enemy of Bid'a, 305. Hanfash, 55. Hanifites, 251, 143 ( I I , 22).

350

MOHAMMED AND ISLAM.

Harb, ibn Ismä'il al-Kermäni, 211 ' ( X V I I , 1). Haridasa, 329. Harnack, Adolf, 4. Hartmann, Martin, 244. Härün, (Aaron), 278 ( V I I , 2). Härün al-Bashid, 73. Hasan (Son of ' A l i ) , 223, 263, 276 ' ( I I I , 7), 336. Hasan ibn-'Adi, 243. Hasan al-'Askari, 246, 277 (V, 3). Hasan ibn-Thäbit, 283 ( X I I , 1). Hasan al-Basri, 222. Hawäri, (apostle), 149. al-Häzimi, 290 (XV, 5). al-Heitami, Shihäb al-din Ahmed ibnH a j a r , 34 (XI, 4), 76 ( I I , 9), 78 (IV, 8, 10), 147 ( X I I I , 8), 285 ( X I I , 5). Hellenistic thought, 3. H i j r a , 7-8. al-Herewi, Abü Ismä'il, 186. Hermits, 180. al-Hilli, Hasan ibn-Yüsuf ibn-alMutahhar, 287 ( X I I I , 5). al-Hindi, Siräj al-din ' Omar, 289 (XIV, 5). Hinduism—Union with Islam, 327. Hishäm (Caliph), 283 ( X I I , 1). Hishäm al-Füti, 125. Holy spirit, 7. Horovitz, J., 285 ( X I I , 3). Horovitz, S., (on Kaläm) 146 ( X I I I , 1). Horten, Max, (on Kaläm) 146 ( X I I I , 1, 4). Huart, Cl., (on H u r ü f i ) 77 ( I I I , 4), 293 ( X V I I I , 10). Hudeifa, ibn al-Yamän, 206 ( V I I , ' 3). Hureific, 34 (X, 4). Hurüfi, 269. I. Ibädite, 221, 275 ( I I , 5), 275 ( I I , 12, 13).

Ibn 'Abbäd, Mu'ammar, 125. Ibn ' Abbäs, 253. Ibn ' Abdalbarral-Namari, 30 (IX, 1). Ibn ' Abdal-Wahhäb, Mohammed, 308. Ibn Anas, 45, 55, 132. Ibn 'ArabI, 33 (IX, 1), 282 ( X I , 16).

Ibn 'Arab-shäh, 206 ( V I I I , 7). Ibn ' Asäkir, 145 (VI, 1). Ibn al-Athir, 146 ( X I , 6). Ibn al-Hanafiyya ibn-' Ali, Mohammed, 144 (VI, 1), 158, 225, 242. Ibn Hazm, 31 ( I X , 1), 233, 276 ( I I , 14). Ibn Hishäm, 69, 81 (IX, 3). Ibn al-Jauzi, 78 (IV, 10), 204 (V, 2).

Ibn Jubair, 277 ( V I I , 2), 294 ( X I X , 3), 338 ( V I I I , 2). Ibn Kayyim al-Jauziyya, 78 (IV, 2), 143 ( I I I , 1), 201 ( I I , 19), 205 (VI, 13). Ibn Kais al-Eukayyät, 81 ( I X , 2). Ibn al-Kalänisi, 79 (V, 9), 278 ( V I I , 2), 287 ( X I I I , 4), 288 ( X I V , 4 ) . Ibn Khalaf, 55. Ibn Khaldün, 282 ( X I , 16), 285 ( X I I , 5). Ibn Khallikän, 82 (IX, 15), 82 (X, 2), 82 (X, 6), 143 ( I I , 21), 277 (IV, 8) Ibn Kuteiba, 31 ( V I I , 2), 76 ( I I , 7), 81 (IX, 12), 144 (IV, 7), 199 I I , 4), 210 (XIV, 2). Ibn Maja, 44, 201 ( I I , 17). Ibn Mas'üd, 68. Ibn al-Mukaffa', 79 (V, 6). Ibn al-Sab'in, 169. Ibn S a ' d (Biographies), 30 (V, 3), 31 (VII, 2), 33, 34 (X, 4, 5), 34 (XI, 5), 75 (I, 2), ( I I , 2), 76 ( I I , 8, 9), 77 ( I I I , 1, 3), 78 (IV, 6), 80, 81 ( V I I I , 3, 8, 10), (IX, 6, 8, 13, 18), 82 (X, 3), 141 (I, 2), ( I I , 1,

INDEX.

351

Intolerance, Shiite—towards non-Moslems, 256 ff.; towards Moslems, 261, 267 ff. Islam, 2, 3, 4, 7, 8, 10, 12, 14, 15. Ethical effect, 15, 20, 26. Lack of conscience, 16. Virtue, 17. Sin, 17. Inculcates morality, 17. Demands ceremonial acts, 17. Piety, 18. Niyya (Purpose), 18. Steep path, 19. Ibn Shubruma, 64. Modified in Traditions, 19. Ibn Sina (see Avicenna). Good works, 20. Ibn Slrin, 142 ( I I , 15). Darker sides, 21. Ibn al-Ta'awidi, 283 ( X I I , 1). i Militant, 22 ff., 26. Ibn Teymiyya, Taki al-dm, 30 (V, 3), World religion, 27-38. 78 (IV, 7), 79 (VI, 2), 114, 145 Later development, 38. (VI, 2), 146 ( X I I , 4), 207 (X, 1), Mohammed's—immature, 38. 209 ( X I I I , 1, 3, 7, 14), 212 Legal development, 39. ( X V I I I , 3), 292 ( X V I I , 18), 308 Early tolerance, 38, 40. ff. Conquests and soldiers, 41. Ibrahim al-Nakha'i, 64, 212 ( X V I I , Administration of justice, 42. 6). Behaism as reformed, 316. Ibrahim ibn-Edhem, 174, 206 ( V I I I , Law of—, superseded, 318. 9), 207 (IX, 3). New phase of, 332. ' i d al-Ghadir, 253. Beligious law and modes of life, ' Idiyya, 326. 257. Idrisites, 263. Influence on Hinduism, 326. Ikhlàs, 18. Isma'il of Delhi, Maulawl, 326. I j m a ' , 57 ff., 130, 193 ff., 215 ff. Isma'il al-Farani, 32 (IX, 1). In Shiism, 222 ff., 239, 298. Isma'il ibn J a ' f a r , 263 ff., 267. Ikhwàn al-safa, 283 ( X I , 16). Isma'ilites, 263 ff., 212 ( V I I I , 3), 82. Ikama, 251. ' I r a k (home of casuistry), 71 ff., 82 Imam, 90 ff. (X, 1), 159, 254. In the Shiite sense, 222 ff., 229 Iranians, 256. ff. i Apotheosis in Shiism, 232. J. Sinlessness, 234, 238. Jabarites, 101. Imam Mahdl, 244. Jacob, George, 171, 208 ( X I , 6). Importance of, 247. J a ' f a r , al-Sadik, 228, 229, 262, 263, Active vs. passive, 262. 278 ( V I I , 3)! India, 171 ff., 270. ! J a ' f a r i (rite), 335. Islam's hold in, 323 ff. i J a f r , 279 (X, 4). 3), 142 ( I I , 9, 13, 16, 17, 18, 19, 22), 144 (V, 1, 2), 146 ( X I , 4), 157, 199 (I, 1, 2, 3, 5, 6, 9), 199 ( I I , 2, 3, 5, 6), 200 ( I I , 10, 11), 201 ( I I , 15, 20, 21, 22, 23), 202 ( I I I , 1, 2, 3, 4), 203 ( I I I , 11, 14), 204 (Y, 4), 212 ( X V I I , 6), 276 ( I I I , 2, 5), 277 (IV, 1, 2), (V, 1), 278 ( V I I , 5, 6), 279 ( I X , 2, 3, 4, 6), (X, 3), 281 (XI, 5), 283 ( X I I , 1), 289 (XIV, 5), 291 ( X V I I , 3), 293 ( X V I I , 19), 337 (I, 4, 6).

352

MOHAMMED AND ISLAM.

Jahiz, 16, 80 ( V I I , 2), 82 (X, 6), 83' ( X , 9), 137, 141 ( I I , 1), 142 ( I I , 18), 144 (V, 8, 10), 201 ( I I , 18), 202 ( I I I , 1, 5), 206 ( V I I I , 2, 6), 212 ( X V I I I , 2), 279 ( X , 1), 280 ( X I , 1), 281 ( X I , 5), 288 ( X I V , 3), 290 (XV, 6), 293 ( X V I I I , 4). Pseudo-Jahiz, 78 (V, 2). Jahmiyya, 212 ( X V I I I , 3). J a ' i r , 277 (IV, 3). Jami'a, 280 (X, 4). Jarir, 83 (X, 8), 141 ( I I , 1, 6), 283 ( X I I , 1). Jelal al-din Riimi, 167, 174, 181, 183, 204 (VI, 2), 205 (VI, 5, 12), 206 ( V I I I , 9), 207 ( I X , 2), 208 ( X I I , 2, 4), 209 ( X I I I , 4, 6, 12). Jemal al-din, sheikh al-Islam, 76 ( I I , 9). Jemil al-'Udrl, 81 ( I X , 2). Jenghis Khan, 242. Jesus, Reappearing, 333; Grave of, 332. Jethro, 25. Jews, 7, 14, 43, 76 ( I I , 9), 276 ( I I I , 6).

In Medina, 7. In Yemen, 40. In Bostra, 41. More kindly treated by Sunnites than Shiites, 260, 292 ( X V I I , 18), 293 ( X V I I , 19). Marriage with Jewish women, 200 if. Jewish influence on Mohammed, 3, 7, 12, 30 ( V I I , 1), 65. Judeo-Christian influence on the Mahdi belief, 242 ff. Jihad, 126, 154, 160, 325, 333. Jinn, 71, 82 (X, 6), 83 (X, 7). Jizya, 40. John the Baptist, 235, 279 ( I X , 2). Jordan, F. M., 321.

al-Jorjani, Abu-l-' Abbas, 290 (XV, 4). al-Jorjani, Abu Yahya, 288 ( X I V , 3). al-Juneid, 69, 187. Jureij, 154. Jus-Asaf, 332. K. Ka'ba, 4, 13. Kabir, 327. Kadarites, 101, 104. Kadi (The great man), 53, 75 ( I I , ' 3). Kafir, 93, 106, 195 &., 212 ( X V I I , 5, 6), 214, 218. Ka'im, 247, 312. Kalam, 105 if., 137. Kalb Salim, 18. al-Kali, 33 ( X , 2), 81 ( I X , 11), 201 ( I I I , 1), 202 ( I I I , 5), 276 ( I I I , !)• Kasim ibn-'Abbas, 243. al-Kastallani, 201 ( I I , 18), 283 ( X I , 16). Kalkhi, 242. al-Kashi or al-Kashani, 'Abdarrazzak, 205 ( V I I , 1). al-Kazimi, Asad Allah, 279 ( X , 2), 280 ( X , 4), 281 ( X I , 2), 287 ( X I I I , 4). Kazwini, 272, 275 (I, 2), 294 ( X X , ' 3). Kerbela, 89, 224, 254, 290 ( X V I , 2). Kern, Fr. 80 ( V I I , 6). al-Kettanl, 181. Khabab, 150. Khalid ibn-Makhlad, 291 ( X V I I , 3). Khalid ibn-Sinan, 4. Kharijites, 92, 217. Khassaf, Abu Bekr Ahmed, 83 ( X , 9). Khawwas, Seyyidi 'All, 281 ( X I , 5). Kheragh 'All, Moulavi, 75 ( I I , 3). Khorasan, 262.

INDEX. Khojas, 270. al-Khwarizmi, Abu Bekr, 277 (IV, 4 ) . al-Kifti, 75 ( I I , 3). al-Kindl, 282 ( X I , 16). Kitab, Akdas, 318, 338 (X, 9, 11, 13, 16). Koran, 7, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 17. Not sufficient, 28-29. Created or uncreated, 120 if. What is it, 123. A s h ' a r i ' s teaching, 128. Allegory, 169 ff. Kremer, Alfred, v., 100, 172, 177. Kuenen, Abraham, 302. K u f a , 262. K u f r , 212 ( X V I I , 6). al-Kulini, Abu J a ' f a r Mohammed, 276 ( I I I , 3, 6), 277 (V,' 1, 4), (VI, 1, 2), 280 (X, 4 ) , 282 ( X I , 16), 288 (XIV, 3), 293 ( X V I I , 25, 26), 341 (XV, 1). Kumeit, 142 ( I I , 12), 290 (XVI, 1). al-Kummi, Abu J a ' f a r Mohammed ibn-Babuya, 286 ( X I I , 8). al-Kummi, Mohammed ibn-Hasan ibnJumhur, 282 (XI, 16). Kunut-request, 251. al-Kurashi, Abu 'Amir, 114. Kurat al-'Ain, 315. al-Kurtubi, 206 ( V I I I , 8). al-Kusheirl, ' A b d al Karim ibn-Hawazin, 188 ff., 210 (XV, 1), 275 (I, 2). K u t b al-din al-amir, Abu Mansur, 69. L. Lammens, H., 81 ( I X , l a ) , 142 ( I I , 8). On the Metawile, 292 ( X V I I , 14). On the Nusairi, 294 ( X I X , 5). Law—written and oral, 43. Shiitie interpretation of, 258. (See also Roman Law). Lebanon, 273.

353

Lebh Shalim (see Kalb Salim), 18. Legends, 272. Loisy, on the relative worth of religions, 15. M. Macauliffe, M. A., 327. Macdonald, D. B.—Psych. Analysis of the Sufi Position, 204 (VI, 4), 337 (I, 5). Madahib (sing. Madhab), 54 ff., 191 if., 214 ff., 221. Differences from each other, 59. Magi, 14. Mahabba (mystical divine love), 168 if., 182. Mahdawi-sect, 284 ( X I I , 3). al-Mahdi, Caliph, 69, 73. Persecutes the Shiites, 225 ff. Mahdi, 90, 158, 232, 332 if. I n Shiism, 240 ff. I n orthodox Sunna, 245 if. Rise of—belief, 244 ff. —belief in modern Persia, 247. Mahdi movements, 245, 284 ( X I I , 3), 308. Mahmud al-Ghaznawi, 323. al-Mahruki (dervish), 275 ( I I , 5). Maimuni, 75 ( I I , 3), 144 (V, 11), 147 ( X I I I , 6). Makam, 335. Makr-Allah, 25 ff., 33 (X, 4) ff. al-Makrizi, 288 (XIV, 4). Malami, 208 ( X I I , 3 ) . Malamatiyya, 180, 181. Malik ibn-Anas, 45, 60, 61, 132, 299. Malik ibn-Dinar, 165. Malikites, 251. Ma'mun, 79 (V, 6), 81 ( I X , 7), 120, 291 ( X V I I , 3). Mansur, 107, 277 (IV, 3 ) . Marabout, 232. Marcionites (see Gnostics). Manicheism, 321. Marcellus-Ammianus, 252.

354

MOHAMMED AND ISLAM.

Margoliout.h, D. S.—On the influence of the New Testament on the oldest ascetic literature, 161. Marriage, Temporary, 252. Mixed, 261. Buddhism, 313. Beha, 318. Martyrdom, Commemoration of, 253 ft. Maslaha, 298. Mashrak al-Adkat, 322. al-Mas'udi, 81 (IX, 10), 143 ( I I I , 3), 199 (I, 6), 293 ( X V I I I , 9). Mashaf Fatima, 280 (X, 4). Ma'sum, 79 (VI, 2). al-Maturidi, 116 ff., 122. Maulid al-Nabi, 298. Mawakif, 147 ( X I I I , 3, 7, 10). al-Mawerdi, 145 (IX, 3), 200 ( I I , 8), 278 (VII, 6). Mazdar, abu Musa, 125. Mazhar (Manzar), 316. Mecca, 7 ff., 22. Meccans, 296. Medina, 7 ff., 22. al-Meidani, 277 (IV, 9). al-Menini, Ahmed, 285 ( X I I , 6), 286 ( X I I , 9). ' Melikshah, 69. Merill, Selah, 259. Merwan I., 141 ( I I , 1). Meshreb, Sheikh, 181. Metawile, 259, 292 ( X V I I , 14, 15). Mi'dad ibn-Yezid, 159, 203 ( I I I , 12). Midianites, 25. Midrash, 32 (IX, 1), 33 (X, 1), 145 (XI, 1) (see also Agada and Talmud) . Mikdad ibn-'Abdallah al-Hilli, 287 ( X I I I , 5). Milet al-bayan, 316. Milet al-furkan, 316. Miramolin, Miramomelin, Miramomelli, 223.

Mirza Ghulam Alimed, 332. Mlrza Mohammed 'Ali, 312, 322, Mohammed, A guide, 21. A witness, 21. Not a paragon, 21, 22. Prophet of battle and war, 23. Worldly ambition, 24. A world prophet, 27, 28, 3S. Horizon circumscribed, 37. ' ' Companions'' of, 42. Character, 156. Humor, 201 ( I I , 18). Blamed by some Shiite sects, 233, 278 ( V I I I , 2). Eegarded as a traitor, 278 ( V I I I , 2). His sinlessness, 235. Emanation of the world-spirit, 265. Eegarded as a myth by the Nusairiyya, 273. Mohammed al-'Abbasi al-Mahdl, 284 (XII, 1).' Mohammed 'Abduh, 135, 300. Mohammed Abu-l-Kasim, 240. Mohammed 'All (Pasha of E g y p t ) , 309. Mohammed (Shah of Persia), 247. Mohammed al-Bakir, 236. Mohammed ibn-Isma'il, 265. Mohammed i b n - J a ' f a r , 263. Mohammed ibn-Sa'dun, (see Abu 'Amir al-Kurashi). Mohammed ibn-Sa'ud, 308. Mohammed ibn-"VVasi', 165. Mohammed of Jaunpur, 285 ( X I I , 3 ) . Mohammed al-Hifni (Hibat Allah), 283 ( X I I , 1)'. Morier, James, 258. Moses, 183, 231. Eegarded as a deceiver, 278 ( V I I I , 2). Emanation of the world-spirit, 265. Reappearing as Bab, 313.

INDEX. M u ' ä d ibn-Jebel, 40, 202 ( I I I , 5). | Mu'äwiyya, 33 (X, 4), 76 ( I I , 7), ! 152, 216. Mujtahid, 329. Mughiriyya (Shiite sect), 234. Muhammed, see Mohammed. al-Muhäsibi, Härith, 208 ( X I , 5), 275 I, 2). al-Muhibbi, 79 (Y, 8), 204 (IV, 3), 292 ( X V I I , 18). Muhyi al-dln (see Ghazali), 191. Muhyi al-dxn ibn-'Arabi, 183, 185, 205 ( V I I , 1), 206 ( V I I I , 1), 209 ( X I I I , 14), 280 (X, 4). Mukaddasi, 143 ( I I , 23), 194, 287 ( X I I I , 1). al-Mukanna', 242. al-Mukhtär, 256. Mulawi-Nür al-din, 334. Muktafi (Caliph), 69. Müller, August, 217. Müller, Max, 328. al-Murädi, 280 (X, 4), 286 ( X I I , 9). M u r j i ' a , Murjiites, 80 (VI, 4), 91 ff., 143 ( I I , 23), 144 (V, 1), 212 ( X V I I , 6), 212 ( X V I I I , 3), 218. al-Mufid, al-Sheikh, 292 ( X V I I , 18). Müsä al-Käzim, 241. Muslim, 31 ( V I I , 2), 44, 255. Mustansir (Fätimide caliph), 287 ( X I I I , 4). M u t a ' a (temporary marriage), 252 if. Mutakallim, 105, 137, 181, 191. Mu'tasim, 68. Mutawakkil (Abbaside), 40, 121, 225. Mutawäll, 259. Mu'tazilites, 106 ff., 220. On the justice and unity of 1 Allah, 174 ff. On anthropomorphism, 112. , On divine attributes, 115 ff. | Declare Koran created, 119 ff. j Rationalistic but intolerant, 124. |

355

Their doctrines accepted by the state, 125. Contrasted with Ash'arites. 127 ff., 130, 197, 212 ( X V I I I , 3). Relation to Aristotelianism, 137. Form no sect, 214 ff. Bclation to Kharijites, 220. Relation to Shiites, 249 ff. Modern, 331. Muwahhid, 143 ( I I , 23). Muwaffak al-dln 'Abdallah ibnKudama, 145 (VI, 2). Muwatta-Codex, 81 ( V I I I , 11). Mythology, 108 ff. In Shiism, 271 ff N. Nabid, 68. Nadir Shah, 335. al-Najashi, Abu-l-' Abbas Ahmed, 280 (XI, 1), 281 ( X I , 3), 282 (XI, 16), 286 ( X I I , 8), 293 ( X V I I , 25). N a ' i l a (wife of Othman), 261. Naka 'id, 83 (X, 8), 141 ( I I , 1). Nakhawla, 292 ( X V I I , 15). Nakus, 76 ( I I , 7). Namazi, 284 ( X I I , 3). Nanak, 327. Napoleon I I I , 316. al-Nasa'i, 81 ( I X , 5). Nasir (Caliph), 284 ( X I I , 1). Nasir al-din (Shah), 258. Natik, 265. al-Naubakhti, Hasan ibn-Mohammed, 280 ( X I , 1).' Nawawi, 16, 31 ( V I I , 2), 32, 33 (X, 4), 78 (IV, 9), 142 ( I I , 15), 199 I, 6, 10), ( I I , 1), 201 ( I I , 17), 202 I I I , 5), 206 ( V I I , 3), 277 (IV, 3), 279 (IX, 2, 10). Nazzam, 137, 250. Nazar, 130. Nejef, 257, 301, 336. Neo-platonism in Sufiism, 105, 137, 166, 171, 177, 206 ( V I I I , 1), 264.

856

MOHAMMED AND ISLAM.

New Testament, 19, 27, 45. Nestorian translation into Arabic, 144 (V, 2). Influence on ascetics of Islam, 161, 164 ff. In Behaism, 320. Among the Ahmediyya, 333. Neyya, 18, 48. Nicholson, E. A., 171, 177. Nirang, 260. Nirvana (see Atman). Nizam al-Mulk, 127. Nizam-schools, 127, 190. Noah, Development of his legend in Islam, 281 (XI, 5). Noer, Count of, 328. Noldeke, 27, 34 (XI, 2). History of the Koran, 30 (V, 2), 35 ( X I I , 1), 201 ( I I , 19). On the Sufi, 204 (V, 5). Noyes, John Humphrey, 252. Nusairiyya, 233, 273 ff., 292 ( X V I I , 14), 294 (IX, 5). Nur al-din, 203 ( I I I , 5). O. Old Testament, 6, 17 ff., 45, 133, 201 ( I I I , 1). Imam theory proved from, 276 ( I I I , 6). Proofs for Beha', 322, 333 ff. (see also Torah). 'Omar I, 39, 67, 75 ( I I , 2), 76 ( I I , 8), 87 ff., 216, 279 (IX, 6), 283 ( X I I , 1), 261 ff. Forbids temporary marriage, 253. 'Omar I I , 40, 52, 68, 142 ( I I , 16), 162, 309. 'Omar ibn-al-Farid, " S u l t a n al-'ashi k l n , " 168, 171. Omayyads, 51. Complaints against, 41. Indifference to Islam, 87 ff. Freedom of will, 103 ff. Not theocratic, 151.

Wars against 'Aliites, 216 ff. Wars against Kharijites, 219 ff. Opposed to Shiism, 222, 225 ff., 276 ( I I I , 7). Their fall, 225, 244 ff. 'Othman, (caliph), 34 ( X I I , 1), 92, 152, 159 ff., 216. Has a Christian wife, 260 ff. 'Othman ibn-Maz'un, 199 ( I I , 6). 'Othman ibn-'TJbaidallah, 157. P. Palmer, 25. Pan-Islamism, 335. Pantheism (see Neo-platonism). Parsees, 14, 321. Parousia, 256. Patton, W. M., 121. Perfectionists, 252. Persia, 270, 321. Pharisees (Arabic transl. of word), 144 (V, 2). Philo, 170. " P i a f r a u s , " 50. Pincott, Frederick, 327. Plato,—temporary marriage in his state, 252. Plotinus, 166. Polemic, Mohammedans against Jews and Christians, 9. Against Christian ascetics, 160 ff. Polak, J . E., 258. Porter, ' ' Five Years in Damascus,'' 41.

QQuietism (see Tawakkul). R. Eabi ' ibn-Khuthyam, 159. Eabi 'al-awwal, 298. Eabbi Yehuda, 46. Eahbaniyya, 154 ff., 160, 200 ( I I , 11). Eahib, (plur. ruhban), 10, 154. Bamadan, Eclipses at, 333.

INDEX. Ram Sanaki (Hindu seet), 328. al-Razx, 'Abd al-Karim, 203 (IV, 1). Redhouse, Work of Khazraji, "Pearlstrings," 288 ( X I V , 4), 290 ( X V I I , 1). " R e t u r n " (doctrine of), 242. Reitzenstein, 181. Renan, E., on Metawila, 292 ( X V I I , 14). "Review of Religions" (Organ of the Ahmediyya), 334. Ritual, Shiites vs. Sunnites, 251. Clean and unclean, 257 if. Roman law, its influence, 3, 51. Rosary, 177, 310. Ruhban (see rahib). S. Sa'a, Hour (of the end of the world), 282 ( X I , 16). Sabbath, 14. Sabians, 293 ( X V I I , 19). Sacred law, only standard, 52, 61. Sadakat, 261. Sadhu (Indian monk), 172. §afed, 259. Sa'id ibn-al-Musayyab, 142 ( I I , 13), 199 (I, 6). Sa'iliun, sa'ihat (wandering monks), 161. Saint worship, Indian influence, 324. S a j ' , 11. Saladin, 203 ( I I I , 5), 259. Salat, 21, 91. S. al-jama', 318. fjSalih, 25. Samadhi (Hindu), 168. Samaritan, 293 ( X V I I , 19). Samarkand, 243. Saoshyant (Parsee Phantasy), 245. al-Sarakhsi, Abu 'All, 197. Sassanian kings, 52. Schleiermacher, 2. Schools (Four), 55.

35?

Seal of the prophets, 265 ff., 245. Sects, 214 ff. Tendency to unite, 335 ff. Sefewi-dynasty in Persia, 335. al-Sennusi, 147 ( X I I I , 11), 212 ( X V I I I , 1). Seveners (see Isma'llites), 264. Selman al-Farisi, 273. al-Sha'bl, 80 ( V I I , 2). al-Shadali, Ahmed ibn-Mohammed alSufi, 210 (XV, 1). Shafi'i, 55, 57, 83 ( X , 7), 251. Shahrastani, 145 ( V I I I , 3), ( I X , 2), 233, 275 ( I I , 10), 291 ( X V I I , 4), 293 ( X V I I I , 3). Shah-Zinde, 243. al-Shalmaghanl, 187, 278 ( V I I I , 2). Shamwll, Shamil, and Samuel, 243, 308, 335. al-Sha' rani, 'Abd al-Wahhab, 80 ( V I I , 6), 209 ( X I I I , 14), 211 ( X V I , 2), 237, 279 ( I X , 13), 281 ( X I , 5). Shari'a, 182. Sharik, 69. Sheikhite-sect, 312. Shemsi-Tebrizi, 205 (VI, 6), 209 ( X I I I , 2). Shiism, 89, 170, 198, 222 ff., 224 ff., 275 ( I , 1). In relation to Mu' tazilite dogmatics, 249 if. Ritual related to the Shafiite, 250 ff. Saint worship, 253 ff. Relation to tradition, 254 ff. Not Iranic but genuinely Arabian, 255 if. More intolerant than Sunnites, 256 ff. As a state religion, 324 ff. Shirk, 48. Widening of its conception among Mu'tazilites, 117. In Sufiism, 176, 184.

MOHAMMED AND ISLAM.

358 1

Shirk—Mil tazilites ) A s h ' a r i ' s teaching, 128. Saint worship, 305, 309. Differs from Shiite—, 254 ff. In India, 325 if. F i f t h rite, 335. Shuhfur ibn-Tahir al-Isfarainl, 291 Sura, 7. ( X V I I , 8). Mecca and Medina, 10 ff. Shu'eib, 25. Surat al-Muluk, 318 ff. Shumaniyya, 172. Sur la Pierre Blanche, 37. Sifat, qualities, 167 if. al-Suyuti, 177, 204 (V, 2), 205 ( V I I , Sikh, 325, 327. 1), 276 ( I I I , 7), 277 (VI, 3). Sirat-bridge, 109. al-Suweidi, 335. Siyaha (wandering monks), 161. Swariji movement, 271. Snouck Hurgronje, 9, 30 (IV, 2), T. 177, 324. al-Tabarl, 33 (X, 4), 76 ( I I , 8), 80 Songor ibn-Melikshah, 69. ( V I I , 6), 141 ( I I , 1), 142 ( I I , 5), Spencer, Herbert, 296. 142 ( I I , 11), 203 ( I I I , 13), 283 Star of the West, 322. ( X I I , 1), 291 ( X V I I , 6). Steiner, Heinrich, On the Mil' tazilTabaristan, 251. ites, 106. al-Tabarsi, 203 ( I I I , 15). Stoics, 137. al-Tahawi, Abu J a ' f a r Ahmed, 289 Subh-i-ezel, 315, 339 ( I X , 18). (XIV, 5). al-Subki, T a j al-dln, 34 (X, 4), 77 ( I I , 9), 79 (V, 5), 80 (VI, 4), 81 Taifur, Ahmed ibn-Abi Tahir, 79 (V, ' 6), 81 (IX, 7). ( V I I I , 12), (IX, 4), 82 (X, 6), 83 T a j al-'Arifin, 243. (X, 7), 146 (XI, 5), 146 ( X I I , 5, Tajsim, 131. 6), 200 ( I I , 11), 203 (IV, 1), 207 Takiyya, 261, 277 (V, 2), 321. (XI, 3), 208 ( X I I , 1), 275 (I, 2), Taklid, 131, 144 (V, 10). 279 (IX, 4), 241 (XVI, 1). Takwa al-Kulub, 18. Suf, 165, 186, 210 (XIV, 1). T a l a ' i ibn-Buzzik (Shiite vizier), 255. Suflism, 32 (IX, 1), 165 if. Talha ibn-'Ubeidallah, 150. Nomistic and anomistic, 177 ff. Ta'llmiyya, 270. Influenced by Shlism, 238. Talmud, 43, 45 ff., 50, 78 (IV, 3, 11), —connected with Isma' Iliyya, (V, 4), 80 ( V I I I , 4), 145 ( X I , 1), 268. 281 (XI, 5). (See also Agada In India, 326 ff. and Midrash.) In Akbar's religion, 329. Tamerlane, Timur, 269, 329. Sufyan al-Thaurl, 63, 212 ( X V I I , 6). Tarika, 175, 182, 188. Sufyan ibn-'Uyeyna, 204 (IV, 3). Path of, 180. al-Suhrawardi, 278 ( V I I , 3). Tauhid, 82 (X, 1), 117, 249, 326, 329. al-Sulami, 205 ( V I I , 1). i In Sufiism, 176. Suleiman (Calipli), 283 ( X I I , 1). Tawakkul, 163. Suleiman al-Adani, 294 (XX, 5). Ta'wil, 1, 4, 131, 269. Suleiman ibn-Surad, 283 ( X I I , 1). Ta'wil al-Ta'wil, 268. Tchaiherinye (Chinese moslem sects), Sunna, 8, 42 ff., 90, 113, 295. 341 (XV, 4). Supplements Koran, 43.

INDEX. al-Tha'alibi, 277 (IV, 8). Thamudites, 25. Theodoras (Messianic king of Abyssinian Christians), 242. Thora, 23, 129, 183. Tiele, C. P., 1. Tilimsani, 183. Tirmidi, 34 (X, 4), 44, 80 (YI, 5), 143 ( I I I , 2). Tisdall, 18. Tolerance, Towards outsiders, 39 ff., 75. Towards the Madahib, 55. Towards sinners, 90. Of ijuflism, 181 ff. Taught by Ghazali, 197. More natural to Sunna than to Shiism, 257. Between Sunna and Shia, 335 ff. al-Tujibi, 210 (XY, 1). al-Tusi, Mohammed ibn-Hasan, Shiite bibliography, 282 ( X I , 16), 285 ( X I I , 8), 288 ( X I V , 3). al-Tusi, Nasir al-din, 287 ( X I I I , 5) " T w e l v e r s , " 246, 312.

U. ' TJbeidallah, 150, 263. 'Ubeid'allah ibn-Musa, 291 ( X V I I , 3). 'Ulema, 319. ' ITlyàniyya, 233. ' U m à r a al-Jemani, 288 (XIV, 3). Usàma ibn-Zeid, 204 (V, 2). Usùliyyun, 291 ( X V I I , 4). " U t i l i t a s p u b l i c a , " 299.

V. Vaishnavas, 242. Vambery, 341 (XIV, 1). Vedas, 16, 323. Vegetarians, 160, 162.

:359

Vincenti, Karl v., " Tempelstiirmer in Hocharabien," 310. Vishnu, 242.

W. Wabisa ibn-Ma'bad, 17. Wahhabites, 307 ff., 311, 325. al-Wakidi, 76 ( I I , 4). Waki' ibn-al-Jarrah, 69. al-Wakkatun, 243. "Wandering monks, 161, 172 ff. Wasil ibn-'Ata, 106. Well (cult of saints), 303 ff., 310. Wellhausen, Jul., 141 ( I I , 4). Westermarck, Ed. W., 295. Whinfield, E. II., 171. Wilkinson, E. J., 324. Wine, 66, 67. Prohibition of, 267. Word of God, 119 ff. World language, 318.

Y. Yafi'i, 200 ( I I , 11), 203 (IV, 1), 205 (VI, 10), 206 ( V I I I , 7). Yahya ibn-Aktham, 81 ( I X , 7). Yahya ibn-Ma'in, 82 (X, 6). Yahya ibn-Sa'id, 78 (V, 4 ) . Yahya ibn-Zeid, 262, 272. al-Ya 'kubi, 31 ( V I I , 2), 76 ( I I , 8), 143 ( I I I , 3), 277 (IV, 4), 279 (X, 3). Yakut, 81 (IX, 9), 144 (V, 6), 211 ( X V I I , 1, 7), 278 ( V I I , 2), ( V I I I , 2), 291 ( X V I I , 5). Yathrib (see Medina). Yazid ibn-Mu'awiyya, 141 ( I I , 3). Yezid, 259. Yogi (Hindu), 179, 208 ( X I , 7). Yunus (Maronite emir), 75 ( I I , 3). Yosua b. Lewi, B., 50. Z. Zahid, 106, 144 (V, 2, 6). Zahiriyya, 274.

360

MOHAMMED AND ISLAM.

Zakât, 21, 38. Zanzibar, 270. Zeid ibn-'Alî, 262. Zeidites, 262 S. Ziyâd ibn-Abî Ziyâd, 162. Zindïk, 173, 187, 214, 321. Zoroaster, Zoroastrians, 102, 259 ff., 329 ff.

Zubeir, 149. Zubeir ibn-Bekkâr, 201 ( I I , 1 8 ) . Zuhd, 172. al-Zuhrï, 77 ( I I I , 1 ) . al-Zurkânï, 299.